Kindle DX Wireless Device Reading Tool Review
First off,
Alain Mikli Vintage Sunglasses_1263, I've used the 1st version of the Kindle and I wanted to note that I have a vastly more positive attitude of my new Kindle DX Wireless! The Kindle DX is the larger version with a 9.7-inch screen, equitable over 1/3 of an inch,
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bose on ear headphones, it holds up to 3,500 books, and it has a built in PDF reader,
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For my purposes,
but then it was not called the 90_867, the Kindle DX is approximately ideal. I use it mostly as a travel machine. It accustomed apt be that anytime I went on an out-of-town voyage, I had to judge which 3 radiology periodicals and which 2 books apt package. But given the Kindle's cache capability, I can load it up with dozens of paperbacks and PDF files.
I have not major complaints about the E-Ink technology. The major affirmatives include:
1) It is very easy to read in direct brightness (as opposed to a backlit system such as a netbook or an iPhone).
2) It paints very tiny power (and accordingly the Kindle requires rare recharging)
3) It's easier above the eyes than whichever backlit system.
The only relatively inferior negatives to the E-Ink technology are:
1) The slower refresh rate while cornering a sheet compared to a typical LCD calculator screen.
2) The display is greyscale merely (no color). For most books that's a non-issue. It merely really affects me when looking at medical articles,
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The Kindle interface is also generally nice for my purposes. The issues that bothered me with the older version are simply no as significant a problem for me. I don't rely on the Kindle for memorandum catching. I'm in the process of likewise perusing Tara Smith's book Ayn Rand's Normative Ethics, and have had no problems with perusing it.
The 3 small UI (consumer interface) nuisances as me are as follows: