Showing posts with label kindle forums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kindle forums. Show all posts

Saturday, March 20, 2010

First anniversary of the blog - Unique uses for the Kindle


Without realizing it, I celebrated the first anniversary of this blog yesterday, March 19, by spending some time at a park and then going next door to Costco, where I used the Kindle again to check product reviews on sales items.  (Until I received a note reminding me, late last night, I totally forgot it had been a year.)

HOW TO GOOGLE REVIEWS, NARROWING RESULTS
At any rate, after you turn on wireless and wait for it to get a good 3G connection, you can google reviews easily from the Home Page by just starting to type the Search terms or Keywords.  In this case, I typed 'samsung' and then the model number, followed by the word "review" after it and then pushed the 5-way button to the right until it said 'google' and pressed down on the 5-way.

There's usually no need to do a log-in to read reviews, so you can do this in the 'Basic Mode' setting and it's a bit faster usually.  But I was in 'Advanced
Mode' yesterday at times too and it wasn't as slow as before nor did the colors always get translated into many shades of hard-to-read-gray on the review pages.
  But, normally, I recommend Basic Mode for this.

The web browsing experience, overall, seems considerably faster than it was last year.  I'd still never call it 'surfing' -- it can be more like swimming against the tide, but it's better lately.  I wonder if they're working on that a bit as part of the software updates.
  Getting the first page of results or of any article will take the longest because it's gathering the rest of the pages also.  After that, next-paging is as fast as on a computer now.

After you've clicked a link to 'jump' to a review and finished reading or skimming it, you press the 'BACK' button to get back to the search-results page where you can choose another link.

You can also view this in Landscape mode and be able to read more easily sometimes.  (Press the Aa key to rotate the display.)  I checked http://gmail.com (not the mobile version, which doesn't work well with Kindle) in Landscape mode and was able to awkwardly get through its input blocks to read latest mail.  It's not fun but it's doable.

If interested in trying the web-browser feature, take a look at my tips on getting better speed with it.  The blog article also includes a downloadable file (free) with prepared links to webpages that are optimized for mobile-devices.

FROM THE FORUMS - Unusual/Unique things done with the Kindle
Today's blog entry won't be about other readers, tablets, or the book-pricing wars but -- in keeping with seeing how Kindle owners are enjoying their readers a year after I started this site -- this will feature what some of what people at the forums are saying the last 3 months about the unusual things they enjoy doing with their Kindles.  The topic has been going on for some time, with good ideas (recipes being a favorite, as well as searching for info as a rider in a car in a new place), but there are a few more uses.  These will be the latest from the message thread titled The Most Unusual/Unique Thing You Use Your Kindle For.
' [Starting with the most basic use]
A. Sisk says:
Most of things you all talk about I use my iPhone for...I just use my Kindle as ....well....a book.

And I love it.


A. Book Lover says:
Merriam Webster Spanish-English Dictionary ($6.36) works fine on my Kindle 2. I made it the default dictionary and it works as a translator at the bottom of pages in a Spanish language book I bought.


VKI says:
Okay, my children are Irish dancers. At their Oireachtas (regional championship), after I saw the competitor lists, I went online and looked up the results from last year. That helped me remember what name went with which dancer and about how well they were all dancing last year.


Maggie Leung says:
For travel, I compiled a file of handy foreign phrases and loaded it on my Kindle.

This is one source for phrases:
http://www.omniglot.com/language/phrases/index.htm

It has a bunch of useful phrases, plus this goofy one, which I'm looking forward to springing on someone:

"My hovercraft is full of eels."


techweenie says:
I put my lecture notes on my Kindle instead of printing them out every semester.


techweenie says:
... good idea. I also keep book lists on mine, so I know what the next book in a series is.


A. MacDiarmid says:
Techweenie: I do that too but also books by favorite authors so I can easily find which book I want to get next even if it is not in a series.


[Lead Singer 63 asked how the following was done from a previous posting by E. Sund that said:]
I used my Kindle to read a paper I wrote for grad school out loud to me because it was easy to catch grammar mistakes and awkward wording that I would have missed if I read it silently. I think I'll do it with every paper from now on!


A. MacDiarmid says:
Lead Singer 63: ... I use Open Office which saves files in ODT format. Calibre can translate that to a Mobi file which is readable by the Kindle. I just send it to the device and it translates and copies it to the Kindle in one click. Calibre handles a lot of different file types, so look and see if it has yours.


Carbonbased says:
I have the Installation of Officers for my fraternal organization on my Kindle. I originally typed it up in word and saved a copy in .rtf so I could use it on a palm-based pda. When I got my [Kindle] DX, I attached the .rtf file to an email to (me)@free.kindle.com.

It comes back as .azw [Kindle format] and TTS [Text-to-speech] works on it. For a very small fee [15c per megabyte of a file], you can [instead] send it wirelessly [to your Kindle] from any email you have given permission to send. You give permission on the 'manage your kindle' page. Your home email on file with Amazon is already listed, with a function to add other specific addresses or whole domains.


Tawnilynani says:
My husband & I went to a city we were not that familiar with to buy me a car, after driving around for about 45 minutes looking for a certain bank, I remembered I had my Kindle with me. I used it to find the nearest bank branch & the car auction! Thank goodness my Kindle is always in my purse!


Patti D. says:
I'm now storing genealogy records on it, so they'll be with me whenever I want to access them.
I also have lecture notes on mine, in case I need to step in for a colleague who is ill, without advance warning.
(I plan on putting all of my lecture notes on mine, eventually.) '

  Another useful forum thread that's ongoing is in response to forum visitors who wonder whether the Kindle is worth $260.

THE COMING YEAR
When I started this blog, I think the only solid competitor Amazon had was Sony, a company which was making e-readers quite some time before the Kindle -- but the free wireless downloads of books from almost anywhere was the defining and usually irresistable feature (for those who wanted e-readers at all) in a unit that was well thought-out for those who like to not only read but search a book, make notes and highlight passages.  If only Amazon would make that possible for its PDF handling.

 Maybe the 50 or so new e-readers marching toward Amazon's gates will help Kindle customers get some needed features more quickly. ( An update for Kindle organization is due before summer, per Amazon's Kindle support team.)

  I used to feature info on new ereaders, to see what other companies are offering, but they are in such abundance now that I'll tend to wait until they become reality and people have had a chance to explore the functioning of the units -- we've seen how misleading ad specs can be this last year.

  I noticed a tweet the other night from @Merrilyn (Jan Zlendich):
"Using the new Kindle for Mac software makes me think I'll not be using the iPad for reading books - e-ink makes for a more relaxing read."

I have the same reaction to long-session, sequential reading on a really good netbook screen even with white background dimmed (Samsung's matte screen - with almost no reflections) even though I can read short articles on the web for hours on a computer).  It'll be interesting to see how people new to e-reading will respond to non-e-ink screens for book-reading.

FRIDAY'S THE KINDLE CHRONICLES PODCAST
This week's interview is with Joshua Tallent, Founder and CEO of eBook Architects, who spoke with Len Edgerly in person on March 14, 2010, in Austin, where they were attending South by Southwest Interactive.  They discussed the iPad, eBook prices, and how authors can succeed in publishing for eBook formats, especially the Kindle.
  Each Friday's podcast includes Kindle news, tech tips, an interview, and comments from listeners via phone or email.  I learn something new with every podcast.

And for those interested in the latest in the e-reader and tablet scene, visit his new The Reading Edge Podcast - "Conversations about the eBook Revolution Hosted by Len Edgerly." Lots of interesting stuff.


Ongoing GUIDE TO FINDING FREE OR LOW-COST KINDLE-BOOKS AND SOURCES
Also, a page of links that confine searches to mid-range priced e-books. Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

A geographic-restriction glitch for non-USA Kindle book purchases - Update3

See UPDATES at bottom of this blog article.  Glitch is now fixed for most reporting in.

Customers on the MobileRead forums and Amazon Kindle forums reported that although they have, for a long time, been able to buy Kindle books while out of the country for Kindles Amazon had shipped to their given U.S. addresses, they received geographic-restriction rejections of the Kindle book orders, starting this weekend.

This occurred even with People using U.S. credit cards (rather than gift certificates which can be used internationally).  Kindle owner and author Bufo Calvin started an Amazon forum poll to try to find out the circumstances of those affected before making assumptions and gathered already some good information.

A reassuring response came from customer Eliza Bennet, from Canada, who responded to Bufo with this information:
' I just (an hour ago) spoke with a kindle CS rep and he informed me that "something went wrong" with the amazon server and many techies had been called in over the weekend to fix the problem vis à vis the "geographic restriction" message.  I live in (Ottawa) Canada and gave him the name/billing address of the credit card attached to my account (which belongs to a friend living near Boston), and he made no comment about it not being my own card.  He also had no adverse reaction to my saying I paid for books with a gift card.  Certainly hope that he knew whereof he spoke! '
BlogKindle had an earlier article today in which he suggested a workaround if needed, using US proxy servers.

This weekend's problems are likely due to changes made in connection with an anticipated launch of the Kindle in the UK, which has had digital book restrictions also, and programming changes, too often, have untoward effects on other areas of similar code.

When you have questions that other customers can help with, a visit to the Amazon Kindle Community forums can be helpful.  There are also some amusing threads there too that I've pointed to before.  The forums are for sharing of information between customers and can also be playful (sometimes a tad rough) and is a good community with lots of new people everyday needing help.  Now they finally have a forum-search mechanism so that helps quite a bit.

UPDATE2 10/5/09   - Original Posting was 10/4 at 3:52 PM
  (Update1 was incorporated above.)
Julia of the forum-poll thread above added a written response from Customer Service tonight, which was another example of customers with U.S. credit cards and address being affected by the problem as well:
' I'm sorry for the trouble you had when trying to purchase Kindle books outside U.S using a payment method issued by a U.S. Bank with a U.S.billing address. I've reported this to our technical team, and they're working on taking care of it.

Please try again over the next few days. Errors like this are usually
corrected shortly after they're reported... '
They've been corrected for some customers, so far, as reported in the forum thread.

UPDATE3 10/6/09, 3:15 PM -  Original Posting was 10/4 at 3:52 PM
Caroline Wong has made a second, updated poll at the Amazon Kindle forums, to monitor how the fixes by Amazon are going.  Many are reporting they can once again order as they did before.  And in the original poll by Bufo Calvin, some who had problems have been reporting they are once again able to order/buy from Amazon as before and have received non-boilerplate email from Amazon Customer Service representatives who have been following up on the problem.

 At MobileRead forums, 'mgmueller' describes how he has been buying books from Germany as an Amazon-US customer and that it is working for him.  Earlier than his post is one from 'Dharmabum' who was unable to buy e-books this weekend unless using an IP# workaround but can buy again today using his regular method, which is like mgmueller's and those of others reporting on the Amazon forum threads.

  The glitch is obviously being fixed for many, including some who were/are skeptical about it being a technical glitch.  Various workarounds over the weekend had been Hotspot Shield, VPN to US, and UltraSurf 9.5 - the latter has been reported to be not entirely safe due to processes noticed in it, reports which I can link to later; it could also be due to processes meant to confuse authorities in China who are banning Net access to many to various sites, but I opted not to test it due to some reports.

UPDATE4 10/12/09
On October 7, one day after the International Kindle 2 announcement, Customer Service wrote to Bufo Calvin's poll thread at Amazon forums to say that they felt they had resolved the problem and that all affected were able to receive books again, with the gift certificates they had been using. Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

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