Click on a label to read posts from that part of the world.
Click on a label to read posts from that part of the world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
More from AOL Travel:
Airline tickets,
Hotel reservations,
Car rental,
Vacation packages,
Discount cruises,
Last-Minute Deals
Travel Guides:
Las Vegas,
New York City,
Los Angeles,
Boston,
Chicago,
Washington, DC,
London,
Rome,
Paris,
Tokyo,
Minneapolis,
Phoenix,
Austin,
Charlotte,
San Diego,
Mexico City,
Copenhagen,
Sydney,
Bangkok,
Bogota,
Toronto,
Costa Rica,
Bermuda,
Puerto Rico
© 2012 AOL Inc. All rights Reserved. Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Trademarks | AOL A-Z HELP | Advertise With Us | About Our Ads
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
2-09-2009 @ 3:38PM
Brian M said...
My wife and I are struggling to find a reason to spend such a Vast sum of money on something so specialized that STILL requires a monthly contract. We're library people (helps that I'm the IT director in one), cards are free, books too (for the 1~2 weeks it takes to read one). Ebooks are available on any computer, again for free, and a netbook (Dell mini 9, $249) is cheaper than the Kindle and does a lot of vastly more useful functions at the expense of battery life.
Needless to say, we haven't found justification for towing around yet Another gadget, especially when it's a one-hit-wonder. Even my MP3 player can play every audio file known to man, show movies/video and it acts as a small reader as well (Cowon D2).
So, for those who have one or are going to buy one, how did you make the justification? More money than you know what to do with? I'm honestly curious.
Brian
Reply
2-09-2009 @ 3:49PM
Scott Carmichael said...
Brian - you make perfect sense, and it is indeed quite a lot of money to spend on a gadget.
To me, the Kindle really is not interesting for people who enjoy sitting at home and reading a good book the old fashioned way. Electronics simply can not replace the look and feel of a "real" book.
The power of the Kindle comes from the ability to buy a book anywhere you want. There are no monthly fees involved with the device, and the cost of downloading your book is included in the book purchase.
The Kindle is perfect if you are stuck at the airport, or in a hotel room and need a new book to read.
Yes; a Dell Mini 9 will do e-books, but good luck keeping that thing going for more than a few hours. The Kindle does not use any power except when you download a book or change pages. When the e-ink display is working, pages are static, and don't drain the battery.
Also, the device is easier to carry around than a normal PC or netbook, there is no reboot involved, no patching or anything else that takes the fun out of reading a book.
If you read a lot of books, then the $359 investment is fairly easy to justify, as it saves on shipping costs, saves on the price of overpriced books at the airport or local book store and saves gas which you'd waste driving to the library or book store.
The Kindle also offers newspapers, magazines and blog access.
2-11-2009 @ 10:11PM
Andrea said...
quote: "....Vast sum of money on something so specialized that STILL requires a monthly contract."
Huh?? I didn't know the Kindle required a monthly contract? Please explain! Thanks!!