Showing posts with label sendtoreader. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sendtoreader. Show all posts

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Kindle News: Lighted Kindle Touch may be delayed. Lighted Nook vs current Kindles. Updated for informational comments from readers.


     
DigiTimes says lighted Kindle Touch may be delayed.


(Original blog article dated 7/13/12 updated 7/14-15 for more information.)

Taiwan's DigiTimes has a report today by Sammi Huang and Alex Wolfgram that Amazon is "currently facing problems with mass production due to problems with the device's front light design, which may delay shipping of the device until later in the third quarter, according to industry sources."

There's an error in the article in that they say Amazon's been working on this 'since' B&N launched its Glowlight model, but Amazon acquired a company specializing in this technology quite some time before that and was reported to be working on a new Kindle model that would use a built-in front light.  However, they've still not produced one yet.

  "Recent reports" indicate to DigiTimes that Amazon has "stopped certain parts shipments" for that new e-Ink Kindle and these may be stopped "throughout July and August in order to tackle issues with the device's front light."


FRONT-LIGHTED E-INK DEVICES, NOOK GLOWLIGHT, AND KINDLE TOUCH
Information from an earlier article in May included here

  Includes an UPDATE for forgotten recent features added to Kindle Touch
  mentioned by blog commenter Tom Semple, plus some added details and comments.

Amazon may be trying to avoid some of the mild contrast issues mentioned.

  Oldtimers to this blog may remember that I did a few blog articles about the lack of sufficient contrast in the Kindle 2 screen display for many, and although my own Kindle 2 was okay, the Kindle 1 and the Kindle 3 were quite superior to it in darkness of font and contrast perceived.

  At one point, I talked about Kindle 2 screen contrast in connection with a Wired.com article, so I'm sensitive to a relative lack of contrast and had a problem with the original Nook Touch for that reason although I had bought the NookColor on sight and enjoyed that mode.

All reviews on the new Nook GlowLight are very positive.  More than a few mention, though, that some will see less contrast in the screen display relative to the older Nook Touch and the current Kindle.  But you never need to add a light attachment and many have been looking for that feature with E-Ink.

(I use the Beam N Read 3-Led light, as that works well with everything and not just e-readers.)

FROM REVIEWS
A fairly detailed review posted by Gotta Be Mobile's K. T. Bradford include many photos plus a video also
The positives presented include:
  Lights up screen evenly, doesn't drain battery too much, responsive touchscreen,
  speedy performance
The negatives include:
  eInk display contrast not as good as original Nook, doesn’t support documents other than PDF.

  [Note that the Kindle supports WORD docs, HTML, txt, Mobi, and Prc, as well.]
  Bradford writes:
' If you place them side by side, you can tell that the GlowLight version is a shade or two lighter.  Same with the Kindle Touch.  Even without the comparison, I noticed that the new Nook’s text isn’t as dark as I’m used to.  The lighter contrast isn’t as noticeable with the GlowLight on.

 It looks like Barnes and Noble made a choice to sacrifice the level of contrast in order for the best performance with GlowLight.  They also claim that the anti-glare screen protector is a best-selling accessory, so many Nook users already experience this.  The resulting quality isn’t a dealbreaker, but will be a consideration for buyers.
. . .
  Conclusion:
 It comes down to which is more important: the darkest text or the lighted screen?  If the latter is a bigger deal, then the Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight is for you. '

Some reviewers consider the Nook GlowLight the best e-reader, for the one feature, the built-in front lighting, as well as its being easy to hold.

  I've noticed that those who do this omit from the article the many other features that have become important to Kindle Touch owners such as audio, music, a very decent web browser, annotations kept for for each book on the owner's personal Amazon web page, very effective sync'g of reading between devices, and the ability to send Word Doc, Text, Mobi, Prc books or documents AND web pages direct to the Kindle for reading offline, while none of the above is doable with the Nook.  With the Nook, attempted sync'g between devices is notably weaker, per reviews.

  So, the oddly one-feature reviews concentrate only on the Nook light, although a few also mention the Nook never having ads (even though the Nook home page has 'recommended for you' books (which I personally consider ads and I often don't want to see those on my personal e-reader home screen).

  I haven't included a couple of those when they ignore (for the person reading) other important features in favor of just one feature while not informing readers of differences.

  I also saw that a CNN reviewer compared the current Nook to his Kindle 2 (from 2009!, from fully 3 years ago, and wished the old Kindle 2 were a Touch device ! and then said the Nook is definitely better than that.  That stood out.

TIME Techland's Harry McCracken at least mentions that Kindle has other features even if he minimizes them and he finds the Nook GlowLight the most useful for him.

  In their comments area, Adam Ritchie commenting via his Twitter ID, writes:
'just purchased a nook with glowlight, and am really hoping they do a firmware update that addresses the loss of text contrast.  it’s substantial.  it doesn’t have that “ink on a page” look you had with the basic nook, that made you forget you weren’t reading a real book.  i asked @NOOK_Care about this a few days ago and didn’t get a response. '

MacWorld/PCWorld's Melissa Perenson loves the new Nook Glowlight, and it's definitely 'the one' she recommends alhough she doesn't compare features at all otherwise.  Many do just want an e-reader to read a book and don't want to have to deal with a night light, especially one that annoys a bed partner.  Features like audio (for podcasts or audiobooks or music) don't matter to many nor does fairly easy web access to news and email.

  Even then, Perenson does mention the following also:
' One other nitpick: The contrast is not as good on the GlowLight version as on the plain Nook Simple Touch.  This problem appears to result from the antiglare protector on the GlowLight model; the background of the display is a darker gray than on the plain Nook, and that in turn causes black text on the GlowLight version to lack the same omph as on the ordinary Nook.

  I hold out hope that the contrast might be adjustable via a future firmware update.'

Digital Trends's Jeffrey Van Camp roots for the Nook ("Keep it up, B&N") while going for balance in his review although, like many, he believes the B&N marketing which claims that access to the scanned Google Books makes B&N richer in number of books, but the latter is available in multiple ways for Kindle too as are now, literally, millions of other free books.

  He points out that both e-readers have their advantages and includes this about the contrast concern that some have:
' There are a few tiny downsides to having the light. The tablet appears to have ever so slightly less contrast and E Ink consistency than the last Nook, though only geeks like us are likely to notice.  However, a new anti-glare screen should help its readability ever so slightly outdoors.'

The Verge's David Pierce also really likes the new Nook and writes what commenters say is one of the more thorough reviews they've seen, with one commenter saying, "Reviews on the Verge are amazing.  Love the quality and detail of video reviews."

  So check out the video review there as well as the written one.  His 'bottom line' is that the GlowLight is "incredibly comfortable to hold and use, even in one hand, and even after hours of reading my arm didn't get tired."

  He also mentions, that the glowlight is "a wonderful addition to the device" and prefers the Nook's hardware to the Kindle's.

  On the contrast issue (which is not an issue for most who much prefer the convenience of an always-readable e-Ink reader), he has this to say:
' The GlowLight Nook has a screen protector on top of the display, though, which makes text appear slightly softer and lower-contrast than on last year's model.  I didn't notice until I held the GlowLight Nook next to last year's Nook and a Kindle, and even though all three use the same display technology the GlowLight Nook's text didn't look quite as sharp.  It's a fine screen, but it's nothing remarkable anymore, and I'm starting to wish for a slightly higher-res display that renders text a little more sharply.

  I wouldn't describe the light as uniform, though.  It's really bright at the top, right next to the LEDs, then there's a dark stripe right below.  It evens out considerably by the time it's illuminating any text, but it's still inconsistent enough to make certain lines of text look slighty darker or lighter than others.  None of it really impedes the reading experience, but it's not as nice-looking as a cool, even glow would be.

  Still, all things considered, the light works really well.  Rather than a backlit screen that seems to glare out at you, the Nook's screen really does glow a bluish white, which is both easier on your eyes and just generally a nice effect.  The light's intensity is customizable, and will go from just-barely-on to blind-you-immediately levels of brightness.  Reading in bed, I was able to use the Nook with the light only slightly above the minimum level, and still read comfortably. '

He also does point out out something which isn't mentioned by the other writers who are reviewing primarily one feature rather than looking at the feature-set of each -- and that's the ability of the Kindle to work with personal documents and information from websites:
' The really frustrating omission, though, was something I didn't even consider until I started using the GlowLight Nook and not my Kindle.  My Kindle has a dedicated email address, and services like Instapaper and Readability make it easy to send an article (or your whole queue) to your Kindle for reading.

  It's also easy to send PDFs, ebooks from other sources, and just about any other document you can think of.  You can sideload content onto your Nook, too, but it's a much harder and kludgier process involving a lot of ePub files and card readers.  My Kindle is basically my Instapaper reader, and the Nook's not nearly as good a device for that kind of use.'
  His wrap up:
"The Kindle does better with outside content and syncing, but if you're buying an ebook reader to replace your huge paperback collection, the Nook does a great job.  The Nook Simple Touch plus a good, useful light is a pretty great combination — but we've heard Amazon's working on something similar, if Bezos and company already have their hooks into your collection."


MY OWN TAKE:
One thing The Verge's Pierce didn't mention was that the Kindle, with WiFi AND a web browser, can directly download non-Amazon books - and again, we're talking more than a 2.5 million available.  Also, the refresh only every 6 page turns has been a Kindle feature also, for awhile.

Amazon tends to be behind B&N Nook when it comes to hardware features, but its effective work on the many complex and very useful software features and special server-assisted connectivity of these e-readers is what has kept Kindlers enthusiastic about their e-reader, including trading info with other owners on their more unique or creative uses of the Kindle.

And, as you've seen, I've had one particular bias, and that's the relative clarity of e-Ink screens.  If there's a trade-off with clarity as has been expressed even by the enthused quoted above who are hopeful, in the reviews, for a future fix for less sharpness of display, I'm still more likely, as I said on April 8 about the probably-coming Kindle 'lit' screen, to continue to use my Beam N Read light, which I just wear around my neck at night for convenience.  It's also helped me when out at night, during outside walks, where light isn't great.

For those still wondering about differences in connection with other features
I list the long-time differences between Nook and Kindle touch e-readers.

  Since that last features-comparison in late March, Amazon has released Kindle Touch software update v 5.1 with new features that:
  • allow web pages to be read on the Kindle with no website Ads or side-columns, showing instead just the article in readable fonts and with working hyperlinks
  • provide language translation of words in a book or a personal doc
  • added support for reading books or personal docs in landscape mode
      (especially good for PDFs on a small device)

  Reminders about the most recent Kindle Touch features, most of which I hadn't remembered, were added by Tom Semple in the Comments section for this blog article (along with Tom's additional thoughts as a Nook Touch owner):
' Since the 5.1 update, which added the 'missing and bonus features' (KF8, multilanguage support, landscape [orientation], [word] Translation, Report Content Error, multipage text selection, NCX navigation), I have been in ereader heaven. '
These new capabilities are gravy.

 Reviews don't mention (because almost all reviewers don't know) that
  • Amazon Kindle customers have 5 free gigs for their personal docs (the space is for NON-Amazon media not rights-protected)
  • have sync'g, between various devices, of even one's personal docs, and
  • are provided another 5 free gigs for other non-Amazon data files.

Sending web articles to the Kindle
This is not doable with any other e-readers, and this week it became easier with the new feature added to SendToReader, which allows you to be reading on your pc OR your e-Ink Kindle, Kindle tablet, or Android tablet or smartphone, and just add 7 characters in front of a web-link, which will then send the web article you're viewing TO all your Kindles via Amazon's servers, which store and sync them in the same way they provide sync'd access to Kindle books.  It not only works from a desktop browser but sending of web articles to your Kindles or Kindle apps works with every mobile browser I tried on my mobile devices as well.

As Blackbeard pointed out in the Comments area, "... buying an e-reader is more than an investment in a particular electronic device.  It's an investment in an entire infrastructure."

If you don't need or want the extra features
  However, if you don't care about the other features mentioned and just want to read e-books and read them comfortably at night without having to worry about getting a light, you'll definitely want to look at the Nook GlowLight.  Many have delayed getting an e-reader at all until there was some kind of built-in lighting that would work with an E-Ink device, and the new Nook has it.
  If the other features attract, then you can weigh the differences and decide.

Gizmodo and TheDigitalReader on fragility of Glowlight light
Gizmodo's Kyle Wagner prefers the Nook Glowlight to any other e-reader but wrote a column titled, "You Really Don't Want to Drop the New Nook Simple Touch." After reading this, Nate Hoffelder of The Digital Reader did drop tests of keys onto the face of the Glowlight, and other devices, from a couple of feet and found it quite fragile relative to other devices.
  Some commenters to his site felt he was too harsh while others reported they'd had this problem also.  One Amazon review complains, "The slightest bump damages the inner screen allowing rays of light to shine from the screen in spots."
  On the other hand, I've read comments from extremely happy Nook Glowlight users.




US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

  For daily free ebooks, check the following links:
Temporarily-free books - Non-classics
USA: by:
   Publication Date  
   Bestselling   High-ratings

UK: PubDate   Popular
The Kindle Daily Deal
What is 3G? and "WiFi"?       Battery Care
Highly-rated under $1,  Newest: $1-$2, $2-$3
Most Popular Free K-Books
U.S. & Int'l (NOT UK):
   Top 100 free
UK-Only:
   Top 100 free
USEFUL for your Kindle Keyboard(U.S. only, currently):
  99c Notepad 1.1,   99c Calculator,
  99c Calendar,   99c Converter


  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button

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!

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Kindle Tips: SendtoReader (for any Kindle-compatible device) has a terrific new feature. UPDATE

     
SENDTOREADER Update


UPDATE - 7/13/12.  I tested sending web articles to my Kindles and Kindle apps WHILE reading on the Kindle Fire and on my Kindle Touch.

  Adding the 7 characters, described below, in front of a web-link or URL worked with any mobile browser on my Kindle Fire as well. Not only does no other e-reader have the web-articles-send feature but it surprised me that it works when I'm browsing the web on my Kindle Fire  That is quite a boon.  I haven't tried to send an article from an e-Ink Kindle though.  
I was less successful when doing this on my smartphone.  No problems when using s2r.me/ in a URL from my Kindle Fire browsing though.

  One thing I forgot earlier:  Besides needing to register with SendToReader, of course, for the free service, you need to sign-in to SendToReader the first time you use the 's2r.me/' with a given browser.   I haven't had to sign-in again on the same browser (except when I want to look at my list of articles sent in case I want to re-send something later).
  When using it with a different browser the first time for that browser, I had to do the initial sign-in.

SENDtoREADER was very well received by Kindle users, in the many comments written to the original article on it here on March 29, 2011 when I asked readers to try it out.

 I noted in an update that "The feedback was extremely positive, with images coming through well, good general layout, and "a great feature: history of your sent articles (linked) in your account at sendtoreader.com with an option to resend. Thanks to phelcq and Elmo [for the mentioned features]."

After that, the author of the program, Sergey Pozhilov, notified us of a "Web to Kindle" browser add-on called "DroidToReader," which allows SendToReader's features to be used on a Kindle Fire.  He explained it in his comments to the blog entry of March 11, 2012.  It seems this addon, though, is no longer needed.  I'd love feedback on how the new feature described below works for you.

  Sergey's newest improvement is s2r.me which is a "very simple" addon to a link, he says, which allows you to just enter "s2r.me/" in FRONT of the URL or link to an article you want sent to your Kindle as a personal document.

  It would look like: http://s2r.me/[whateverlonglink]

  Of course you have to be registered at sendtoreader.com first, for this to work.  Be sure to read the original article about SendToReader and comments to it by author Sergey and readers of the blog (the article is linked above in the opening).

  Pesonal documents you choose to have sent to your Kindle (rather than file-copied from your computer to your Kindle) go through Amazon servers, where they are kept in the Personal Documents area -- and the access to and reading of these personal docs are sync'd across all your Kindle devices, in the same way that your Kindle books are.

  Example: I saw an interesting story from a press release by The Education World on the Kindle Fire for the Classroom, and I put "s2r.me/" in front of the URL or link on that page and, because I'm registered with a Kindle address at SendToReader, this small addition to the link sent that article to the Amazon servers, which placed a copy in my Personal Documents area and then sent me an email to let me know it was there (the email notification took about 5 minutes to arrive).

  I opened my Kindle Fire and my Kindle Touch, as well as my Kindle Keyboard.  The document was available on all three devices.  On the Kindle Fire, it showed up on the Carousel without my doing anything, ready to be downloaded if I want.  But if you don't see it, you can click on the 'Docs' category in the top menu.

  I never did install the 'DroidtoReader' add-on for Kindle Fire, and yet this new feature worked fine because it's treated by Amazon as a personal document that you want to read on any of your devices, so Amazon makes sure it's available on devices being sync'd.  It also arrived on my Samsung Galaxy S2 phone Kindle books archive  when I ran the Kindle for Android app to see my books and personal docs, and when I clicked on the title, it downloaded it.

 Here's the article on the Kindle Fire in classroom use.  If you click on the link, you'll be at the article of course.  IF you are already a SendToReader member, just put  s2r.me/  in front of the URL for the article (in the location field at the top of the web browser) and this will let SendToReader know you want that article sent to 'me'...

  While normally a URL or link has an "http://" to start the link, web browsers put that part in for you these days, so you can just start it with "s2r.me/" in front of the URL.
  HOWEVER, if the web browser URL already shows an 'http://' on the address line, then put the s2r.me AFTER the prefacing 'http://' and right in front of the URL/link.

  For me, this is a great new feature and I hope others of you will enjoy it too.




Current Kindle Models for reference, plus free-ebook search links
US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

Check often: Temporarily-free recently published Kindle books
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.  Liked-books under $1
UK-Only: recently published free books, bestsellers, or £5 Max ones
    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button 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!

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Kindle Tips: Kindle Fire Books that Seem to Disappear - Solution to Glitch

THE KINDLE BOOKS APP ON KINDLE FIRE HAS A GLITCH THAT CAN CAUSE BOOK TITLES TO NOT DISPLAY -- THE SOLUTION

  This dilemma of Kindle book titles seeming to disappear from Kindle Fire listings of book titles on The Cloud especially (the server library area) and also from the listing for the Device has been happening to more than a few, per reports from the forums -- and it happened to me twice in a few days.

  Forum members, as usual (in this case, 'Q' and 'Mona') came up with the answer a few weeks ago, and more and more of us are needing to use their solution.  The problem seems to have started or worsened after the last Kindle Fire upgrade.

  I think it's important that all of Amazon Kindle Support be told about this solution, because I was told by two members of Amazon Kindle Support to set my KFire back to Factory Defaults (as a 2nd or 3rd step!) which would have lost me the personal documents I had on the device.  I told them I would NOT do that, as it has always been a last-ditch step when nothing else solves the problem and that it causes more unnecessary work for customers when there is a simpler solution.

  Later we were reminded by 'affinity" on the forum that Q and Mona had provided the simple solution, and it worked like a charm for me and for MANY others on the forums.

  I called Amazon Kindle Support back to let them know there was a simple solution and this time (when I asked to be connected back with 2nd level support as before), I got Kindle Customer Support representative Ryan.   He knew about this glitch and the workaround (and started to tell me what it was before I could tell him what forumners were doing) and was surprised that other areas of Customer Support apparently did not know about it, but he said himself that the 'factory default' settings was a FINAL step that shouldn't be taken until other steps proved not to work.

 Amazon, Ryan is a prize.  I wish I could talk directly to him whenever I have questions.  It'd be nice to have someone like him in charge of letting all of Kindle Customer Support know what the latest known glitches and workarounds are.  It would help situations like the one in which one of the two free-book-forum-thread leaders was told to go back to factory defaults and then had to gather (from her computer and Amazon's servers) the personal documents that were of course 'gone' when going back to 'factory' defaults.

For the future, here is, essentially, what Q and Mona discovered.
The first clue that something is amiss is that the Cloud listing doesn't show all your books, but the Amazon servers -will- have them there.  The servers and our libraries on the servers are the 'Cloud.'

  One may or may not be able to access the Cloud directly from the Kindle Fire - doable with music and books and not doable with personal docs (at this time).

  I'll do a blog entry later on the several types of storage (and sometimes streaming) that are referred to as the Cloud, at Amazon.

When the problem with the Kindle Fire that I'm writing about occurs, our books-app "Amazon Kindle Books" is not "seeing" all the titles that are on the Cloud (our personal server library where our Kindle books are kept by Amazon) due to a software glitch that is in the Kindle App on the Kindle Fire.  Some book titles MAY be missing from the 'Device' display (the Kindle Fire itself) also.

  Mona and Q discovered that to correct this software glitch -- you should make sure that "WiFi" is ON and then go to the Gear or wheel icon at the top right of the Kindle Fire and tap that, and then choose "More" -- then go down the Settings list a bit to see "Applications" and select "ALL Applications."  Once there, you can actually select the Amazon Kindle app to be managed in this way when there is a problem.

The Steps: (a clearer way to see them)

Make sure WiFi is 'ON' when doing this)

Go to the Gear wheel at the top right when you're at the HOME Screen

Then click on:
. More,
. Settings,
. Applications
... (choosing ALL applications to view),

Select 'Amazon Kindle' and then
. Click to option to clear DATA (which clears the cache at the same time)
. Press Home at bottom left

SIT BACK (as Mona says) as it all returns to The Way It Was. :-)

No restart needed.  No need to remove the app.  No Factory Default setting involved (and never should the latter be chosen unless nothing else has worked.)

The Kindle Fire then rebuilds the Cloud and "Device" library information, and it doesn't take that long.

Always back up personal docs (as opposed to Kindle books) onto your computers.

NOWadays, we can send those personal documents to our Kindle via email addressed to the Kindle (see earlier articles cited at the bottom of this post), and Amazon will back those up for us, since they give us 5 free gigs of space for personal docs on their servers now (in addition to the 5 gigs for ALL Amazon customers for personal data in general) and they even sync those personal docs across devices too, as long as you send them to your Kindle in email across the Net, which gives them permission to store these for you.

Thanks again to Q and Mona for the steps that have helped several of us.


EARLIER ARTICLES ON PERSONAL DOCUMENTS


US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow 3G web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

Check often: Temporarily-free recently published Kindle books
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.  Liked-books under $1
UK-Only: recently published free books, bestsellers, or £5 Max ones
  Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button

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!

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Web articles to your Kindle w/ images. 'SendToReader' & 'Readability'

EASIlY SEND WEB PAGE ARTICLES TO YOUR KINDLE

Am doing follow-up info on SendtoReader (for Kindle), which offers a BookMarklet for that, and I'm introducing Readability's newer offering of a SendToKindle button.   Both of these tools strip unnecessary side-info, links, ads, polls, etc., and send only the body of an article to your Kindle upon the click of a button.

The Readability tool also displays only the body of the article in your web browser when you click on "Read Now."

Both offer free basic send-to-Kindle service, but Readability has a Premium $5/mo. program if you also want special features, such as "Read Later" (on the Readability webpage) or a History of what you've done.   70% of the income goes to the publishers/websites providing the articles for your Kindle-sends, though I don't know how they do that.

SENDtoREADER, a FOLLOW UP
Basic info on this was given in the March 29 blog entry but I'll include that info here to make it easier:   It promises the following:
' SENDtoREADER  is a simple web application that allows you to send any webpage to your Amazon Kindle Reader instantly.

This gives your Kindle the flexibility to be your work or leisure time companion with a simple click of the mouse.  SENDtoREADER is a simple web application that allows you to send any webpage to your Amazon Kindle Reader instantly.
 ...
Our web app is extremely easy to use. It's just a bookmarklet (or favlet) which works well in all modern browsers including: Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Safari and Opera.  Version for Internet Explorer is coming soon.  Once it's added to your favorites, you can start sending web pages to your Kindle with a single click.  By default, Kindle is a book reader, but with SENDtoREADER you can also make it your personal Magazine.

In order to protect your privacy, our system requires you to register first. '

The comments section for the earlier article has mainly raves about how this SendToReader works.

Norti was the first to report in the Comments area:
' Accented international characters in titles ('őűóúíáé') - and in text, of course - and pictures are well preserved with this, so it's already better than any other other page-sending service out there ... those are likely to fail on accented titles). '

  Early mentions were of images coming through well, good general layout, and "a great feature: history of your sent articles (linked) in your account at sendtoreader.com with an option to resend." Thanks to phelcq and Elmo.

Corneliu Dascalu said,
' This tool deserves all the attention it can get. It's absolutely wonderful. '
Leigh wrote,
' This tool is perfect. Thank you for making me aware of it!  When I could not get for the life of me RekindleIT or Send to Kindle to work, this came along and works flawlessly.  It's nearly instantaneous and the formatting is really nice and it titles the document correctly.  I love that it gives you a history of the articles you've sent, and the little note that shows that your article has been sent when you've pressed the button is nice too.  There is no confusion or wondering for 15 minutes if your article is going to arrive. '
My2¢worth wrote, re a solution to an initial problem he reported to SendtoReader developer Sergey Pozhilov:
' Yesterday the developer asked me to try the new and improved SendToReader with "Atlantic" magazine.
  If the user selects "Print" mode from the web page before clicking on the SendToReader applet it transmits multi-page articles with all photos intact perfectly.
  I think I will be using it frequently. '


I ran a comparison of the same article with both SendToReader and Instapaper and found two significant differences:

1) Pictures on Instapaper were smaller and converted to black and white. (Only an issue for non-Kindle readers, of course).

2) Instapaper articles in the Kindle iPad app did not permit highlighting of text or note-taking, while the SendToReader articles operated just like regular books. I haven't had any periodicals sent to my iPad yet, but I suspect that this may be a an inherent limitation of that sub-format. I may have to fire up my ol Kindle DXG and find out.

So, while it appears that both web converters may work well for Kindle readers, SendToReader would be the preferred choice for the Kindle iPad app.

UPDATED to include this earlier feedback from Elmo Glick
Elmo Glick added a comparison between Instapaper and SendToReader when used in the Kindle iPad app:
' I ran a comparison of the same article with both SendToReader and Instapaper and found two significant differences:

1) Pictures on Instapaper were smaller and converted to black and white. (Only an issue for non-Kindle readers, of course).

2) Instapaper articles in the Kindle iPad app did not permit highlighting of text or note-taking, while the SendToReader articles operated just like regular books.  I haven't had any periodicals sent to my iPad yet, but I suspect that this may be a an inherent limitation of that sub-format. I may have to fire up my ol Kindle DXG and find out.

So, while it appears that both web converters may work well for Kindle readers, SendToReader would be the preferred choice for the Kindle iPad app. '

Pozhilov has updated the page quite a bit since I last saw it. Benefits of using the tool listed on the page include:
  . "Retains all images"
  . "You can send blog posts from Google Reader to Kindle instantly.  And when you send a post, our system visits the source page and sends the whole thing, so you get everything, not just the bit that you see in G. Reader."
  . "You can keep track of every single item you have sent to your Kindle from any other source and can always resend items if necessary"  [which means you can delete them from your Kindle and still get them again later -- and it's part of the free package].

I have no affiliation with the site but have been impressed with the feedback in the blog's comments area.  I asked Sergey P. if his History feature was included free, and he said it was.  He considers this project a "work in progress."


BY THE WAY: There are small discussions in the blog's Comments section, as I reply to feedback and questions.  Am often busy there but that doesn't show up in the normal RSS feeds nor in the Kindle edition of the blog.  If you want to keep up with what's being discussed, I think this link will work.  It may ask you if you'd like to 'Add the [comments] feed' to the web-based reader (in this case, Google's).  You can always delete the feed easily.


READABILITY'S NEW SEND-TO-KINDLE BUTTON FEATURE
The button is easier than setting up a "BookMarklet" for some reason (but Internet Explorer can be done only with a bookmarklet for now) while the button's usable for other popular browsers.

I tried this yesterday and once you set it up it works very smoothly.
  Readability offers "Read Now" and "Send To Kindle" buttons, and their instructions say that if you set up the "Read Now" button, both buttons will show up -- but in my case I had to set up the "Send to Kindle" button separately (which meant just repeating the steps for the 2nd button).  Again, any History or Read later features are part of the premium $5/mo. package.  The Read Now and Send-to-Kindle features are free.


GENERAL KINDLE-SEND CAVEAT: With older Kindles than the Kindle 3, there is no WiFi, only the cell phone network "3G" access, which Amazon pays for although that's an option that on a smartphone costs the user about $15-$35/mo on top of basic charges.  Since Amazon pays for that network access, Amazon has a fee for sending personal documents via its servers to your Kindle if you use the 3G instead of WiFi access, and you'll see that detailed below.


HOW TO ALLOW A SITE TO SEND YOUR KINDLE ARTICLES YOU'VE CHOSEN
  You can specify that the content of a webpage you're on be sent to your Kindle at [you]@free.kindle.com.
  That Kindle address avoids the 15 cents per megabyte charge for sending a personal document over 3G Whispernet instead.  The [you]@free.kindle.com Kindle-address is designed for free delivery to the Kindle over WiFi, as WiFi access doesn't cost Amazon anything.

  (If you don't have the WiFi capability (older models) but you don't want to get the article by computer and move it to the Kindle via the USB cable, the 3G cellular network capability of earlier Kindles can be chosen instead by using the [you]@kindle.com address but the delivery would cost 15 cents per megabyte [99 cents per megabyte for non-U.S. Kindle owners]).

  See my article today about Amazon's changes to its Manage Your Kindle pages today, as it explains how to use the no-cost [you]@free.kindle.com address for free delivery to your Kindle (UK: K3) and earlier Kindles.

It's an important read, if you want to avoid fees for delivery of personal documents.

  Essentially, to use the Send to Kindle feature, Kindle users need to give permission to the sender to put something on their Kindle, so you enter the sender's official sending email address to the "Approved Personal Document E-mail List" at the new Personal Document Settings page.


OTHER article-sending tools like these, reported earlier
1. Granddaddy of them all: Instapaper
  But there was a problem with sending to [you]@free.kindle.com for awhile

2. SendToKindle - a Google CHROME add-on.



For daily free ebooks, check the following links:  (Also, Low-priced Sunshine Deals through 6/15)
Temporarily-free books -
Non-classics
- USA: by:
NEW:  Apr  May  June 2011
   Publication Date   Late-listed
   Bestselling   High-ratings

UK: PubDate   Popular
What is 3G? and "WiFi"?
Highly-rated e-books under $1
Most Popular Free K-Books
U.S. & Int'l (NOT UK):
   Top 100 free
UK-Only:
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USEFUL for your Kindle (U.S. only, currently):
  99c Notepad,   99c Calculator,
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-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

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