Kindle: Incredible Reading Tool, Evil Book-Killer, or Overpriced Technology?
- by Renee Roberts
At 10.3 oz. the Kindle can easily fit into a backpack.
You can always download your Kindle files to your computer; while they can't be read from the computer, the computer's storage can be used when you are out of the country, as Whispernet only works domestically.
So, is the Kindle an incredible reading tool? I think it is. Will it replace books? To some extent. It is certainly a very attractive way to carry around and access large amounts of content. Will it hurt conventional publishers? Only if they are not agile enough to adapt. Copyrighted content is still copyrighted content, and this is an interesting and potentially powerful delivery system.
Will it hurt the rare book market? Only to the extent that people are looking for content rather than the physical book itself. Google is already affecting that part of our industry through its extensive digitizing.
Is it overpriced? Maybe not, when you consider the convenience and the free connectivity. Even at the $400 price, Amazon is continuously sold out, but promises to bring up its manufacturing shortly to meet demand.
One should also mention the device's low carbon footprint. No trees taken down to produce these "paper" products and no delivery "cost."
So, tonight I'll probably get back to my Ellis book, which I'm finding very enjoyable, and check out yesterday's science articles on The New York Times. On my Kindle.
Renée Magriel Roberts can be reached at renee@roses-books.com.