Sweet Kindy – a brief rave about my new kindle…
I received a Kindle 2 for Christmas – or rather 2 and ½ months later, when Amazon announced its second reading device, updated my order and shipped. If you’ve never heard of the kindle, check out this quick video introduction.
There has been a flurry of articles recently by new kindle owners, desperate to reinforce the permanence of paper and to cynically point out that the new Kindle still isn’t perfect. The Just an Asterisk perspective? Well the first thing I downloaded to read was Malcolm Gladwell’s new book “Outliersâ€, in which he describes an outlaw that was “just dumb enough to be fearless, just bright enough to be dangerous and a dead shotâ€. I think we can describe the Kindle with the same terms.
Dumb enough to be fearless
There are a few different ebook readers out there and the Kindle was by no means the first. That said, why did all of the previous devices fail? Were we (as in everyone) simply too happy with paper? I think the answer is (and I’m not the first to suggest this) that the ebook industry was confused. What were we getting from these readers? (More chargers? Eye strain?) What was enhanced by reading a digital version of a book? Rival products by Sony and others had tried hard, introduced too many frills (like being able to play MP3s and silly desktop software) without actually improving the reading experience. In this environment, for an ebook reader to succeed, it just had to be a little bit better than the previous attempts. Amazon needed to dive in, looking perhaps a bit dumb (Amazon does not sell any other hardware) and more than a little bit fearless. Perhaps this was a gamble, perhaps the company was going in a strange direction, but Amazon seemed “just dumb enough to be fearless†– and that was essential to the success of the device.
Bright enough to be dangerous
Once Amazon was in the game, you could easily argue that they were a touch brighter than their colleagues. Amazon had become the definitive noun for an online bookstore. It only made sense that their product be a portal to their proven online shopping experience. Moreover, offering free access (via “Whispernet†from Sprint’s network) resulted in a “wow†factor (I can surf the web for free??) and a heavy hit to my credit card the first week (you can buy a book and start reading within a minute – my wife is going to kill me). Was this earth-shattering technology? No. Was it “just bright enough to be dangerous� Yes.
A crack shot
Amazon had enhanced the reading experience, but what about the standard ebook reader features? They are actually great! One can easily convert PDFs, consult words with the built in dictionary, add annotations and bookmarks and highlight passages for later use. Oh yes, I almost forgot – you even have great internal memory so that you can carry a ton of books around. These are similar features that we’ve seen in most ebook devices. The Kindle does them well, but without flair. It’s for reading books, after all, and as required it’s “a crack shotâ€.
So why the post? It’s hardly full of advice, tips and insight (as I presumptuously assume my other posts provide). The real reason is because the Kindle crowns the content as king. This is not a flashy device, it’s a functional one and that’s what we’re all about :).  This is not a toy but a useful device for everyone.  I hope you’ll investigate a bit further and here are some links to get you started:
~ab