Amazon Kindle Nov21 '07

Is paper truly dead? The Amazon Kindle is promoting this very notion.

What if you could hold thousands of books on a single device, and wirelessly obtain new books as you reside anywhere in the world?

Would this device change your reading habits? Can we adopt to reading books on an electronic device after centuries of paper and binding?

The Amazon Kindle believes so.

The benefits are obvious:

The device itself also lends some generous features outside of "book reading":

My thoughts

I'm gonna stay away from theories about the Kindle being the "iPod of books," or the fact that it offers free wireless internet access, and instead focus on it's intention of replacing the paper-bound book.

The device itself, I could not care any less about, but I can't help but notice it is extremely ugly:

Screenshot of Amazon Kindle

Screenshot of Amazon Kindle

It's obvious they're not trying to sell fashion or style, here. The question is, can the Kindle replace paper? (I'm sure it's main intention is not to wipe the entire planet of paper-bound books, but in theory, it could lead to a revolution of sorts.)

I'd give the Kindle a try. However, there may be a few things I'd miss, at first, which I don't think the Kindle (or any electronic device) can ever replicate:

However, I suppose I could get used to the absence of these things rather quickly.

Categories: Amazon , Books , Kindle

Add Feedback (view all)

Leave feedback

Feedback

Input format: The editor controls below will assist with Markdown syntax.

Status

Sub-status

Your info

matthom is published and produced by Matt Thommes - an independent publishing enthusiast, mobile blogger, content creator, informative writer, web developer from Chicago. Never one to conform, Matt intends to promote the effect the web has on our lives, in an effort to intensify, instruct, and clarify all that is happening around us.

Contact Matt

Similar Entries

Stats

2 unique visits since November 2008

Syndicate

Advertisements