Tag Archives: tablet

Processing Life in a Digital Age of iPads and Tablets :: Friday Feet

I remember when we use to marvel at the power we had at the tip of our fingers on those big clunky desktop computers. You always use to hear things like this computer is more powerful than the one that was used to launch the Apollo rockets, and it was, but today, in the world of tablets (Android or iPad), it truly is amazing how much power we have at our fingertips. Combine an iPad with a wireless bluetooth keyboard and you have something that is mightier than both the sword and the pen.

I understand, realize, and recognize, this isn’t for everyone. I know some don’t even have Internet access and don’t miss it, which is perfectly fine. Those who have chosen to use the technology that comes with being alive in 2011 know that what you are starting to be able to do with tablets is amazing. The lines between being tied to even a laptop have diminished with every passing month, and I equate it to what it must have been like when the car was invented and suddenly people could travel far greater distances than they ever could before.

This is not an Apple thing or an Android thing, this is a means to communicate, to reach and connect with other people, and in many cases a means to change the world. Some may think that is a stretch, so, ok, today, it is a means to read Paul’s words in the book of Acts, and my Friday Feet.

Pros and Cons of The Daily app for iPad

I have been using The Daily app for the iPad for about a week now since it came out and this being the first subscription based daily newspaper type of publication I thought I would do a quick review here. If nothing else, this is going to open the flood gates of countless newspapers and other subscription based publications to release similar formats.

Any company who is in the business of producing paper for the purpose of it being read by a consumer should take close notice to The Daily. If these companies continue to ignore the digital age, as many newspapers and even book publishers have done, their long term viability (or profitability) will get more and more difficult. No question about it, they are going to have to try to find a way to produce a digital product or leave the market.

For those who many not know, The Daily is a daily newspaper type (I say type because it isn’t printed so it’s not a “paper”), delivered each day to your iPad. Subscription prices are very reasonable at $.14 a day, $9.99 a week, or $39.99 a year. With the flood of tablets now coming on the market like the Droid based Galaxy Tab and the Motorola tablet, it’s only a matter of time before The Daily is produced in multiple digital formats, but for now, it’s only available on the iPad.

The Daily Pros

  • New and fresh content delivered daily from professional journalists
  • Price is reasonable and month and yearly subscriptions are available
  • Format and design is outstanding and continues to improve
  • The daily publication can be updated throughout the day with live info
  • A true multi-media format that allows for video, high-def pics, caption pop-ups
  • Integration with Facebook and Twitter, local comments (with voice)
  • Portability and ease of reading on the iPad platform

The Daily Cons

  • Can’t access archives, if you don’t “clip” the article there is no way to access the previous day’s content, hopefully this will change
  • The app still crashes a bit but I’m more than willing to use an imperfect app now
  • Each day’s issue takes a while to download
  • Content is somewhat limited. There is no “TECH” section or “Business” section per say (although the Sports section is huge); too much “Gossip” section reporting and not enough hard news
  • The app is a bit slow to respond.  Although I like the carrousel view, it’s slow

Over time many of the issues I listed above will no doubt be addressed as they always are with new apps. The second generation iPad, the iPad 2 set to come out sometime around April to June should also have a much better processor and will speed everything up as well.

Amazon Kindle 2 Review After Damaged Screen Replaced

Scott's iPhone 2 and Kindle 2

Scott's Kindle 2

Scott's Kindle and MacBook Pro

Being the technology type, I had been looking at the Kindle 2 since it was announced and found it very intriguing.  Most everyone that looks at the Kindle, 1st or 2nd generation, balks at the price of the device but being a photographer and traditionally having to spend $1,000′s on one single lens, spending $360 on a device that will save me money on the price of books didn’t seem like that much to try it out.

Not that $360 isn’t a lot to spend on the Kindle 2, but I just sold a few lenses out of my camera bag that weren’t used to much and a few days later the Kindle 2 arrived.  After using the Kindle 2 for a while I felt like a review of this new piece of technology would be appropriate, but it didn’t end the way I had anticipated.

I will say right off, it is the best, most sophisticated ebook reader (that displays eink as it’s called) and theoretically it can digitize your book collection or library much like the iPod has done for music.  If you just want the conclusion, scan down to that section and I will sum it all up for you.  Some of you may know that I have a Kindle Screen that was damaged (see Damaged or Defective Kindle 2 Screen) so this was after the replacement had been sent by Amazon.

The Kindle 2 Graded

If you want the short of it, here are my grades for the Kindle 2 on different variables in no particular order.

  • Price – [B]
  • Size, Weight, Shape – [B]
  • Screen – [C-]
  • Keyboard – [D]
  • Software – [C-]
  • Ease of Reading [A-]
  • Ease of Searching books [D]
  • Availability of Books for the Kindle [B+]
  • Price of Books [B-]
  • Price of Periodicals [C-]
  • Durability [C-]
  • Customer Support [A]
  • Portability [A]
  • Practicality [C]
  • Internet Browser / Browsing [F]
  • Multi-use Portable Technology Device, i.e. it is a reader, only [D-]
  • Highlighting and Taking Notes [C-]
  • Compared to Other eBook Devices [A]
  • Saving Trees [A+]
  • Creating a Digital Library [A]
  • Ability to Mimic Reading a Paper Book [D-]

All the point above are not weighted equally of course, but overall, I give the Kindle 2 (not having ever used the Kindle 1 but having used most modern portable decives on the market) a total grade of a “C”.

1. Price at $359 – About Right to Me

This is one of the biggest complaints of the Kindle 2.  It costs $359 and since it is only sold by Amazon you can’t really find it for less than that anywhere.  You can find a few used on eBay, but none of the Kindle 2 and Amazon only has a few Kindle 1 in the new/used category.

To me, the price is about right for what it does and the competition it has right now.  When the iPod first came out it was (and still is) about that price and people couldn’t buy them fast enough.  Of course the difference is the Kindle 2 requires that you actually read something.  The iPod since it deals with music has a much larger appeal to the 18-28 age range, and they will usually plunk down $350 for just about anything if they want it bad enough.

I would not or do not expect Amazon to lower the price any time soon until the Kindle 3 comes out, and why should they.  Amazon is probably making bundles on these Kindles with them priced at $359, and I think the price is about right.

2. Overall Size & Weight – OK, But Could be Bigger

The new Kindle 2 is light years ahead of the Kindle 1 in size and weight.  It is about the size in total of a paper back book (not the screen size, the entire device).  It is light and thin, but if I was wanting to ready a long book I could have used the Kindle 2 even larger than it is.  The thickness is about right but I would love to see one about the size of a piece of paper.

3. The Screen – Can You Say, Touch, Color, and Backlit?

The screen is a 16 color grayscale, matte screen.  To me, this was one of the bigger disappointments of the Kindle 2.  The screen was to small, it was not in color, it was not a touch screen, and the biggest for me, the screen is not backlit.

Although the font size can be changed, the screen was too small to really be able to read a full page (on paper) on the Kindle 2.  I would like to see one page on the Kindle equal one page on the corresponding paper book.  Maybe I am jaded by using an iPhone for more than a year now.  I want to be able to touch the screen and have it do what I want, not move some cursor around like I’m in DOS and in the same respect, a color screen is pretty much standard on everything today and it just looked old school.  The last biggie on the screen was the fact that it wasn’t backlit.  I would have preferred to be able to sit in a dark room and read without the need for a reading light.

One last bit on the screen.  All of the images are all converted to gray, which in itself is fine, but it lost detail and did not show what I am use to in a high res screen that shows great detail in black and white.

I understand all those things go to battery life, but I would sacrifice a 2 week battery for one that lasts a few days for the above changes on the screen.

4. Keyboard – Needs Some Help

I know I keep going back to the iPhone, but that I the current device I am use to using.  The keyboard on the Kindle 2 is a full keyboard, but it works like the crackberry qwerty keyboard’s of old.  This is because the keys are very small.  I would have liked to see them closer together and much much larger than the small round dots.  They were hard for me to use, but it was a full-ish keyboard.  All special characters were like a comma, or punctuation, were all on the shift end, which was a pain.

I did like the fact that you could type out comments and notes, but they were hard to get right and easy to mess up.

5. Software Interface – Good, But Not Very Sophisticated

The interface where you actually read the books is good for what it is intended for, but it lacks much of the functionality of today’s handheld devices.  It has wireless through Sprint’s 3G network, and I seemed to get a signal everywhere, even where I don’t on my iPhone (which isn’t really saying much).  Books downloaded quickly and the newspaper subscriptions were always on the Kindle 2 the next morning when I went to read them (I did the trial for the USA Today).

Reading on the eyes is good, probably because of the grayscale I didn’t like, and you can change the font size so it suits your needs.  Taking notes and highlighting on the Kindle 2 is ok, but no where close to perfect.  It saves all the notes into one .txt file and to extract the information you have to parse through all the different notes from the other books.  It doesn’t separate out notes for specific books but puts everything all in one file.  I would have much preferred the file attach to the actual piece I was reading.

Flipping from book to book is a little slow but works well.  If you are trying to get back to a specific place in a book it is a little hard to do unless you bookmark the spot.  Moving around in the books from place to place is much harder than flipping through the book.

Conclusion

In the title I said the “not-so-normal” review, because in the end, I returned my Kindle to Amazon, twice. I have never been accused of being old school.  I will embrace technology and new developments before they are even released, but I still buy all my music on physical CD’s (to burn to my iPhone, iTunes, iPod etc) because there is something you can’t get from a download, the art the artist put into the album.  The design of the artwork, the stories they still include in the booklet, silk screening on the CD itself, back cover artwork, and of course the ability to burn without digital rights management crap.

After using the Kindle 2 for about a week, I took it on a trip to South Carolina and while I was on the trip, the screen became damaged or something, but it wasn’t working correctly (see Damaged or Defective Kindle 2 Screen // Photos).  After receiving a new one from Amazon, I continued to use the Kindle for a while and finally came to the conclusion that I did not like the Kindle 2 enough to actually keep it.

In the end, it came down to something I totally didn’t expect.  I found out that you can not (at least not easily) replicate the actual reading of a book on paper.  You smell the pages, you can flip through pages, write in the margins, underline passages and as you do so, you become part of the book.  Each book is different.  The covers are different, the font size changes, the thickness of the paper, all which is very hard to duplicate in the electronic world and you end up reading all these different books and they all look and feel the same.

As a friend would tell me, it’s not art.  The art of reading, and a lot of the time, it is the art of reading in the way the author intended.  This says nothing about the Kindle 2 device because it can’t replicate the actual flipping of the pages like you can when you physically hold that book.

If you want to read a book straight through from beginning to end, page after page, the Kindle may be right for you.  I want to get lost in time, lost in the pages of paper, ink, and verse, and at least for now, I will stick with the printed book.

Damaged or Defective Kindle 2 Screen Failure :: Photos

Damaged Kindle 2 Screen

Damaged Kindle 2 Screen

Damaged Kindle 2 Screen

Damaged Kindle 2 Screen

Screen Shot of Damaged Kindle 2 Screen

Working Kindle Screen

Last week I traded in a few pieces of camera equipment for the new Kindle to really see if I could just whip through books at lightning speed and to my surprise, after about 2 days of use, I managed to mess up the screen.  I am in the middle of doing an in depth review of the Kindle 2 that I will post at a later date, but after having the Kindle 2 for about 2 days, I seems that the screen on the Kindle 2 was damaged beyond a simple fix.  The reason for this post was really to show what the customer service representative at Amazon did to fix the problem.

For those who don’t know, I really missed my calling in life to be a product tester.  No matter what the product, I can an uncanny way of being able to break the unbreakable and find problems or issues that manufactures somehow seem to miss.  I was told that the Kindle 2 was tested for durability and could withstand a drop from a two story building, but 2 days in my backpack managed to screw up the top of the screen.

Once I went through the normal troubleshooting that I knew how to do, I called the customer service number for the Kindle.  She walked me through a few other tests, had me “reboot” the system (you can hold the power slider over for 20 seconds and that will initiate a reboot on the Kindle 2).  After that (all of which took about 2 minutes total) Amazon told me they would just ship me a new one overnight.  No questions asked, they just shipped me a new one.  They paid for the shipping to return the old one, and I transferred all my book from the old kindle to the new kindle.  It was easy as it possibly could have been.

As for what I did to the Kindle, I have no idea.  I did put it in my backpack (in its own case) and perhaps to much pressure what applied to the top of the screen somewhere.  I am not sure about the 2 story drop, didn’t try that, but I will be a little more careful with it in the future regardless.  I was totally and completely thrilled with Amazon’s customer service on the kindle.

That doesn’t really have anything to do with the practicalities of the Kindle, that will come later, but as far as their customer service goes, it was great.  Having also sold on Amazon for years, I can say that all of Amazon’s customers service is geared towards their buying customers (as opposed to their sellers) and they will bend over backwards to provide the best service they can.

You can see the screen issue on the photos below.  It covers about an inch from the top with a blank line of gray going across the screen with a slash in the upper left corner.  The last two shots are what the screen shot from the damaged kindle looks like (so it is seeing everything correctly under the screen issue) and what the new one looked like when it arrived.

Update May 21, 2010

I thought I would update this post with a few comments since it is still one of the most read posts on my blog. As some have suggested, my Kindle was NOT dropped.  I simply put it in my backpack, which also wasn’t dropped, and took it out an hour later and it showed up with the damaged screen.

I did get a free replacement from Amazon, but I returned the replacement within a week for a refund (see my review A Not-So-Normal Kindle 2 Review for my reasons), but one major reason was I knew the “free screen replacement” was only going to last a short time, and it was a one time shot.  Amazon did replace the damaged screen, but they said they weren’t going to do it again.  Looking back now, more than a year later, it was the best decision and I am not super happy with my iPad.

Update February 12, 2011

As this post still gets heavy traffic and questions, I will say after using and testing the Apple iPad since it came out, I have never had a better ebook reader than the iPad and I am looking forward to seeing the new iPad 2 some time around April. The Kindle App for the iPad is one of the ebook reader apps I use, and although not my favorite, I do use it frequently.

The problem I still have with the Kindle is you basically can’t do anything else with it other than read a book. I can type out notes and highlights in my Kindle app on the iPad and it works great. The one great thing Amazon has done for the Kindle is continue to lower it’s price, but if you have an iPad I’m not sure what use one would have for the Kindle.

Amazon Kindle iPhone App and the Future of Paper vs eBooks?

iphone-kindle

macbook kindle

This morning Amazon released the new Kindle iPhone App, or an iPhone eBook reader.  Since I do not yet (but probably will soon) have a Kindle the news of the Kindle iPhone app was really intriguing, but I started wondering if the app was putting the horse before the cart.  The very first reaction on the Internet was people saying they were disappointed they bought the Kindle and now they can get this on their iPhone.  Totally wrong way to look at it altogether.  What Amazon did by making an iPhone app for the Kindle was make their product more relevant and more useful than it was last week.

I won’t go through a comparison between the two, there is a great review over on CNET, see Comparing Kindle 2 with Kindle’s iPhone app, but one of the great features is being able to read a book between the two devices.  It doesn’t come quite as close as Seth Godin’s request in Reinventing the Kindle (part II) to share books between Kindle users, but it comes closer.  If Amazon keeps going down this road they will really make the Kindle a breakthrough device.

Breakthrough in the same way the iPod was for music, the Kindle can potentially be for books.  Everyone grumbled about the price of the iPod, and it took until the 2nd generation for me to plunk down the money for one, but after a while, people realized that the iPod revolutionized the way we listen to music.  There will always be people who want to read on paper, but for many, paper is a hassle, uses trees, and culturally is on the same track and path as Kodak 400 speed print film, but it’s more than just that.  Don’t blink, traditional media is going fast, and in some cases pretty much gone.

  • Photography – Print Film —> Digital (almost totally complete at this point)
  • Music – Vinyl –> Tapes –> CD –> Digital (niche markets for anything non-digital)
  • Movies – Film –> Tape –> DVD –> Download (slower but almost there)
  • TV – Tube –> Cable –> Satellite  –> Streaming Live (computer only is coming)
  • Books – Paper –> eBooks / Digital (the slowest of the 4, but catching up)
  • Magazines / Newspapers –> Paper –> Digital (totally dying media in paper form)

My wife is currently working on her Master’s degree and last semester she spent something like $300-$400 on books.  After the Kindle 2 came out, I started looking at which books she bought were available on the Kindle.  About 30-40% of them are currently available, at $9.99-$15.  She paid $40-$50 for some of these books which can now be downloaded on the Kindle for $10.  Doesn’t take a genius to figure out the savings potential for College students all over the world, and seeing that Amazon is working on things like iPhone Apps is only going to make the Kindle more and more relevant in our society’s future.

kindle iphone app

Sometimes we go kicking and screaming into the future, and change comes with a fight. The Kindle / iPhone app is a great example of a transition of all forms of media to digital, it’s just a question of how long will we hold on to the past print mediums because that is what we are use to today.

Update March 2011

I have since written an update to this post in light of the iPad, which makes eBooks even more appealing, you can read that posts Printed Books vs iPad or Kindle eBooks and the Future of Books