November 19, 2007 12:11 PM PST

Amazon Kindle: Hands-on first impressions

Amazon Kindle

In the house: Amazon's new Kindle

(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET Networks)

The slow drip of rumors and leaks about the Amazon Kindle e-book reader exploded into a full-blown flood over the weekend, once it was revealed as this week's Newsweek cover story. Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos filled in all of the remaining blanks (or most of them, anyway) at this morning's New York press conference that officially introduced the product to the world. Some relevant details, finally confirmed:

  • Measurements: The Kindle weighs 10.3 ounces and is about the size of a trade paperback book. It's both taller and thicker than the Sony Reader.
  • Connectivity: The Kindle connects to the Web via the "Amazon Whispernet," a free high-speed cellular wireless network (Sprint EVDO). Books and other content are available for direct download, without the need for connecting to a PC (though a USB port does provide PC connectivity for transferring files). The Kindle's internal memory can store up to 200 books, and it's expandable via an SD slot (which can also be used to load additional media).
  • Books: Once you're online via EVDO, electronic books are available directly from Amazon for up to $10--just click on the title you want, and it's downloaded (and you're charged) in about a minute's time. Amazon is currently offering more than 90,000 titles, including 90 percent of the current New York Times bestsellers. The first chapter of most books can be previewed on the Kindle for free. Amazon keeps track of your purchases, so you can delete the file on the Kindle (to make space for more content) and then download it again later for no additional charge.
  • Newspapers and magazines: The Kindle can also be used to subscribe to a variety of periodicals, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, Time, Le Monde, and Forbes. Newspaper subscriptions are $6 to $15 a month, and magazines are $1.25 to $3.49. Dailies are automatically delivered to the Kindle overnight, and each periodical includes a free two-week trial. (There appears to be no discount for existing subscribers of these periodicals.)
  • Blogs: The Kindle also offers more than 300 blogs, including Slashdot, The Onion, BoingBoing, and Techcrunch--but these are customized Kindle versions that cost at least $1 a month. Moreover, unlike your RSS feeds, you can't add your favorite blog--if it's not on Amazon's list, you can't subscribe to it.
  • Web browsing: The Kindle can also browse the Web at large (it has its own QWERTY keyboard directly below the screen), but--unlike the Kindle-ized premium content listed above--most standard Web pages are something of a disaster. The CNET home page, for instance, was rendered as 18 separate pages. Likewise, don't expect support for any plug-ins such as Flash.
  • Notation and bookmarks: You can bookmark key passages of what you're reading, and (using the keyboard), make, edit, and export notes. The Kindle also saves your place when reading anything, so you can always pick up where you left off.
  • Price and availability: The Kindle reader is now available from Amazon.com for $400.

CNET got one of the first review samples, and we've gotten a chance to put it through its paces. What do we think so far? Here's a quick and dirty appraisal, based on just a couple of hours of use:

The Good: Excellent high-contrast screen does a great job of simulating a printed page; large library of tens of thousands of e-books, newspapers, magazines, and blogs via Amazon's familiar online store; built-in "Whispernet" data network--no PC needed; built-in keyboard for notes; SD card expansion slot; long battery life.

The Bad: Design is ergonomic, but not very elegant; pricing for nearly all the content seems too high, especially considering the periodicals and blogs are available for free online; black-and-white screen is fine for books, but less impressive for periodicals and Web content; lacks a true Web browser; included cover is clumsy and poorly designed; yet another dedicated device you'll need to lug around with you.

The Bottom Line: With its built-in wireless capabilities and PC-free operation, Amazon's Kindle is a promising evolution of the electronic book (and newspaper, and magazine)--but overpriced content could be its Achilles' heel.

In other words, the Kindle is a very promising gadget that offers the potential to revolutionize how we read books and periodicals--but I just don't see myself buying one (and I read about two books a month). But again, that's a very preliminary evaluation. The full review is coming soon. In the meantime, let us know if you have any questions about the Kindle's capabilities. And, of course, your opinions: is the Kindle the next must-have gadget, or is there a dealbreaker or two that keeps it from missing the mark? And how many of you are just holding out for the iTunes Bookstore on your iPhone or iPod Touch? Or would prefer to spend your $400 on an Asus EEE PC instead?

Correction: This article initially misstated the Kindle's built-in connectivity options. It connects to the Web via a high-speed wireless network called Amazon Whispernet.

Originally posted at Crave
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 42 comments (Page 1 of 3)
I'll stick with my TX and eBooks...
by Curt Rogers November 19, 2007 2:05 PM PST
... it's not that big a deal to download a book through a PC. Besides, my TX is a multi-use device... with color.
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clueless device
by fortheclueless November 19, 2007 2:19 PM PST
This device is about as relevant today as Palm's Folio was 6 months ago. They are both interesting ideals 10 years ago but lack a purpose in the modern world where people seek to reduce the number of gadgets they carry not increase them. There are so many problems with this device I can go on all day. So lets just point out the obvious. At the price and monthly fee it won't be little johnny getting one for christmas. So lets start with the market. Here is a device that costs hundreds of bucks to acquire, that you need to feed Verizon/ATT's meter every time you wanna read something, while overall readership in the US is declining...as sad as that is. So this is device is entering a declining market, with a whack business model, and doesn't offer up anything new or compelling. Its a niche toy for the business traveller with enough cash to waste on anything. A mass market device it will never be. Next, have a look at the screen snaps that show the NY times. How is that any different than what you get off any large screen phone viewing an RSS feed? For years there was this program called AvantGO that let you subscribe and cache new articles that interest you. You can do that with almost any device, even those with wifi, edge, or EVDO/3G connections. Its text, so who cares how slow your link is...it really won't matter that much. Since I brought up the network lets talk about that one. A device with fast network is irrelevant if the device has horrible support for web browsing. The author said it himself. CNet's own website came across as 18 different webpages no doubt because the device can't understand what an html frame is. What a joke is that? In this day an age, for a device to have a fast network connection and not have opera, firefox, safari, or IE on it is just a sad thing to miss. The fact this device doesn't have that tells me it is extremely limited hardware. Now if you also read that part about rendering images poorly I don't doubt that limited hardware claim. Finally there is this issue that you don't actually get the content. Its "safely stored on the server." I'll presume to infer that means they haven't figured out a DRM solution that publishers can agree on so they are controlling it by giving you a license to read but not own the book you just spent your money on. (i.e, this is the you buy it, you own it, so long as Amazon is around model.) This model doesn't work in music or movies so why would we expect it to work in print? I predict this device will be a colossal failure. Even Sony hasn't exactly made a ton of cash on these things.
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Overpriced, poor design and limited capabilities
by devicespy November 19, 2007 2:38 PM PST
This device is way over priced. Why pay $400 for such a device with limited capabilities like this. The design is poor. The device should have a touch screen like the iPod Touch and iPhone to make it much easier to navigate and use. Why can't you access any blog??? I recommend you pass on this device and go for a low cost laptop or better yet, donate to the donate one get one OLPC initiative.
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The Kindle - my observations
by JohnH_in_OKC November 19, 2007 2:57 PM PST
The Kindle will save thousands of trees from newsprint and book paper. I will likely wait for the next generation color version since I would miss the color pictures of my daily subscriptions to USA Today and The Oklahoman newspapers. Besides the EVDO connection, USB port, & SD slot, I also hope the next generation includes WiFi, WiMax and Bluetooth connections for international usage and flexibility. Hopefully web pages will support flash & 99% proper rendering of most web pages. I foresee this color device as a "bigscreen" option for mobile phones, pda's, ipods, gps mapping and pmp videos. Touchscreen capability and an optional car mount should also be added on the next generation device, especially for mobile phone gps and audio automobile usage (with bluetooth). This may sound somewhat like the Nokia N810 with WiMax, but why not?
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Cost vs. buying books
by fokwp November 19, 2007 3:13 PM PST
How long until your downloaded book purchases save you enough over the equivalent paperbacks - if that's what you use it for - to return your initial investment? A year? By that time is the device obsolete? Can you pass a book on to a friend or the Salvation Army when you are done reading it? How do you spell "DRM"? Magazines return their publishing cost via the ads; subscription is just gravy past that. Since most most magazines are loaded with ads, subscriptions should be free, especially since they will probably be click-to's.
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No wi-fi or real browser???
by durango4 November 19, 2007 3:21 PM PST
Not a real web browser and no wi-fi? Who would want to buy this? Even cell phones have real browsers now! I'd much rather get a ultra-light portable that you can run a real browser, have color, use wi-fi, and still read a book! But at least add these features then it would at least be a usable piece of junk.
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Amazon's big mistake
by CyberBob859 November 19, 2007 3:21 PM PST
I will be very surprised if this thing is on the market in one year. Major disappointments for me: 1) Price - $400. Sorry, I'll spend that money on an iPhone first. This should be around $100-$200 tops. 2) Design - FUGLY!! They can't have it both ways. If you want to charge $400, then put some innovative user interface features in. If you want the interface to look like a 1980's fax machine, the thing should cost no more than $100. Also, how about some modern colors. I just threw away beige computer boxes. Even the newest iPods don't come in white anymore. 3) Where's the PDF support? This is perhaps the defacto standard for document distribution and the Kindle doesn't support it? C'mon - even the iPod supports and plays MP3's along with the AAC format. Likes: 1) Free wireless support - getting e-books anywhere is cool, and not needing a computer to buy/sync is convenient. 2) Large library of books - backed by Amazon. Much better than Sony's online store. I like the idea of what they're trying to do, but this isn't it.
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Useless without PDF and advanced search
by fwpgreg November 19, 2007 3:22 PM PST
Until one of these devices lets me add my own PDFs (several of them), and include some advanced search abilities (lemmatization, word proximity, etc) they simply have no advantage over my desktop or laptop.
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Kindle questions
by HeartofHistory November 19, 2007 3:44 PM PST
- Is it possible to transfer files to the Kindle *without* going through Amazon's "translators"? If so, what kind of files and what is the procedure? - How are PDFs handled? - Is there anyway to backup purchases other than online at Amazon? And just a general question: Is it really as closed a system as it appears?
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Gemstar redux?
by -fjtorres- November 19, 2007 4:00 PM PST
The forced linkage of hardware and online bookstore was tried once before by Gemstar and failed miserably. Like Amazon, Gemstar forced user content to flow through their servers--presumably so they can scan the files for copyright violations. As interesting as the auto-download of periodicals may be, the value of the Kindle is severely diminished by the (apparent) inability to feed the reader user content directly. This is simply too onerous a restriction to tolerate in a world where Project Gutenberg and dozens of other websites offer tens of thousands of legitimately free ebooks in open formats. Also, the chiclet keyboard is eating up too much surface area that would be better used for a larger screen and/cleaner ergonomics. An onscreen keyboard would've been a much wiser design choice. Sorry Amazon, but I'll stick with my PDA and Smartphone for ebook reading.
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