ads

Sponsor

ลงทะเบียนกับ PayPal และรับการชำระเงินผ่านบัตรเครดิตได้ทันที

Friday, October 23, 2009

Kindle DX Wireless Reading Device (9.7" Display, U.S. Wireless, Latest Generation)

Buy Cheap Kindle DX Wireless Reading Device (9.7" Display, U.S. Wireless, Latest Generation)


Buy Low Price From Here Now

Sleek & Trim Kindle DX is as thin as most magazines. Just over a third of an inch in profile, you'll find Kindle DX fits perfectly in your hands. Beautiful Large Display Kindle DX's large display is ideal for a broad range of reading material, including graphic-rich books, PDFs, newspapers, magazines, and blogs. Kindle DX's display is two and a half times the size of the Kindle display. Whether you're reading the latest bestseller or a financial report, text and images are amazingly sharp on the 9.7" screen. Auto-Rotating Screen By simply turning the device, you can immediately see full-width landscape views of maps, graphs, tables and Web pages. Built-In PDF Reader Unload the loose documents from your briefcase or backpack, and put them all on Kindle DX. From neighborhood newsletters to financial statements to case studies and product manuals--you can take them all with you on Kindle DX. Native PDF support allows you to carry and read all of your personal and professional documents on the go. With Amazon's Whispernet service, you can send your documents directly to your Kindle DX and read them anytime, anywhere. 5-Way Controller Kindle DX has an easy-to-use 5-way controller, enabling precise on-screen navigation for selecting text to highlight or looking up words. Simple to Use, No Computer Required Kindle DX is completely wireless and ready to use right out of the box--no setup, no cables, no computer required. Long Battery Life - Read for Days Without Recharging With Kindle DX's long battery life, you can read on a single charge for up to 4 days with wireless on. Turn wireless off and read for up to 2 weeks. Battery life will vary based on wireless usage, such as shopping the Kindle Store and downloading content. In low coverage areas or in 1xRTT only coverage, wireless usage will consume battery power more quickly.
Readmore

Technical Details

- Slim: Just over 1/3 of an inch, as thin as most magazines
- Carry Your Library: Holds up to 3,500 books, periodicals, and documents
- Beautiful Large Display: 9.7" diagonal e-ink screen reads like real paper; boasts 16 shades of gray for clear text and sharp images
- Auto-Rotating Screen: Display auto-rotates from portrait to landscape as you turn the device so you can view full-width maps, graphs, tables, and Web pages
- Built-In PDF Reader: Native PDF support allows you to carry and read all of your personal and professional documents on the go
See more technical details
Customer Buzz
 "Holds over 3,000 books, documents, and newspapers, pretty sweet!!!!" 2009-10-23
By the november sun (Florence< MS)
This is an wonderful A++++ product. Wireless, therefore you get the book delivered quick.

Knowledge is power! The good thing is, the battery has a long life.

One would think that only a certain amount of books would be available for Kindle DX, but no, there are

over 340,000 books and newspapers and magazines!!! You can even download blogs.



There is 4GB of storage in the Kindle DX and the product is 1/3 of and inch thick!, now that is awesome.

I can guarantee that the Kindle DX is WELL WORTH the price. Just think about it, all of your favorite books

and so much more at the tip of your fingertips!

Customer Buzz
 "hardly any science and textbooks for e-readers, kindle or nook!" 2009-10-22
By vivere (Detroit Metro, MI USA)
The DX was advertized for professionals and students. Yet, there are no textbooks to speak of or any other technical/professional books in the physical sciences. The books under physics or astronomy or cosmology are mostly popularized science. Very few, if any, titles for regular science or regular textbooks are included.

Ditto for literature that is not in the current US bestseller list or the just published list. Where are the e-books of Nobel Prize winners in literature?

Yes, I know, tell that to the publishers. Well, Amazon should negotiate with the publishers. After all, we buy the e-reader for access to content and not for the device itself.

The nook ereader from B&N is now about to be shipped. B&N advertizes over a million books.

I put B&N's ereader application on my iphone and searched for science and Nobel prize books. The same dearth of books! Lots of obsolete or of historical value free google books in astronomy, however! That brings the numbers up, without providing current content for non-historians.

Where is Herta Mu(e)ller?

Customer Buzz
 "A nice device but..." 2009-10-22
By Alex (San Francisco, USA)
It's a nice device. A couple of reasons why I returned: 1) it does not support international fonts; 2) the price is too high; 3) features such as adjusting fonts, looking up dictionary for the words being highlighted don't work when reading PDF documents.

Customer Buzz
 "Serenity in Reading!" 2009-10-21
By Saeed A. Siddiki (Riyadh, KSA)
I think i am officially somehow a gadget-eer! between the iPods, Notebooks, cell phones, ultra-thin laptops, HD projectors, AVR's, Plasma, bluray etc etc. There is a device that comes along and just tells everything to: STOP! Take some time out from all the pixel perfect world and just relax and read!



i really had a tough time writing about this device! it just reminds me so much what captain Jean Luc Picard carriers around the Enterprise (information pallet device) there are no papers and books on his desk. I guess that leap from paper to digital needed this: a simple and elegant technology that can intuitively re-invent "digital ink" This device does so with an amazing "color free" range! I am guessing its the fact that this is Black&White or grey is what makes it special but its not. Its actually something the way the books and articles are...they come at you like real paper writing. I can't really explain it. But it just feels right reading it off of the 10'' screen in landscape or portrait.



Now let me give you the quick Pro's and Con's (i might change this as i keep using the device:



Pro's:

Light weight / slick / nice big screen / PDF support is amazing! /

supports USB / Works with audible (on windows machines only sadly) /

good font size control / loads fast / dictionary function is just perfect /

love the highlighting and Clipping article functions / Bookmarking pages

Under a Mac simple drag and drop purchased content via finder /

User interface gets a 6.5/10 / Good pages read tracker/ very good battery life/

very focused and simple device for reading only (not too noisy with other functions)



Con's

Audible content needs activation / no external storage option /

Needs US based credit card for newspapers / no generic WiFi option

PDF viewing can't zoom / some pictures do not render well /

text-to-speech is a pain to work / no native Mac support /

no USB-to-computer internet tethering option / Playing MP3's is not easy/



Conclusions:

If your an avid reader of books, magazine, PDF docs, and newspapers then you need this device!

Its like, i hate to say it, "an iPod" for reading material. It looks, feels and reads like real paper based

books. I really love this device! i started to read more and catch up on so many thing have kept from reading lately, this little silicon gem just brought me back!



Great move amazon! you guys nailed it once more! let's hope you can gear up in international markets more.

Customer Buzz
 "Happy Kindle DX Owner" 2009-10-21
By B. Berkland (Minneapolis)
The Kindle DX is the first dedicated e-book reader that I've owned. After using it daily for a month, I can report that I am very satisfied with my purchase. There is room for improvement, though.



So far, I have bought more than a dozen books for my Kindle DX and find the E-Ink screen very easy to read, both indoors and outdoors.



The larger screen is definitely a plus for doing a lot of reading. It reduces the amount "page turning" and displays text in a format more like a printed book. The resolution is great. The variety of available font sizes for Kindle-format books (not PDFs!) is very helpful.



The 16 shades of gray work remarkably well for many images and outline maps (if they were in black and white in the original publication), but some (originally) full-color maps and graphics too often come out muddy and hard to read - especially colored maps.



The publishers and those involved in converting books to Kindle format need to pay more attention to formatting of the Kindle version. Chapter and section headings don't always have vertical spacing before and after them. Captions too often get separated from the figures and illustrations to which they refer. I have also found several cases where footnote or endnote numbers in the text are not hyperlinked to the note. On pages with images or figures, there are often excessively long blank spaces before and after the image that interrupt the flow of the text. Of course, this says much more about the need for better editing and proofreading of converted books than it says about the Kindle DX itself.



The lack of traditional page numbers in Kindle-format books makes it difficult to cite them in academic or professional writing.



In addition to the Kindle-format books I've bought, I also use my DX to read PDFs and .MOBI e-books. The fact that the Kindle works with PDFs was a significant factor in my purchasing decision. Unfortunately, the Kindle DX's lack of zooming/magnification when displaying PDFs makes some PDFs difficult to read. Rotating the screen to landscape mode does help when reading some PDFs, but the rotated pages sometimes cut off the top or bottom line. The lack of PDF zooming is a major reason for my giving the Kindle DX four stars rather than five. Future upgrades to the Kindle definitely need to include PDF zooming.



I have subscriptions to two newspapers in Kindle format. The Kindle DX is a very convenient way to read them. I find it very easy to navigate through the papers' contents. The automatic, wireless delivery of the papers is great. I like being able to read a European paper the day that it comes out.



The built-in dictionary is far better and more useful than I expected. The text to speech feature - even though it's experimental - is impressive. And speaking of reading aloud, I also use my Kindle to play audio books [...]. The sound quality very good (much better than my old PDA). Note that [...] books needed be downloaded and transferred from a computer; you can't download Audible content to the Kindle directly.



The wireless content delivery works well for me. I do find, though, that it more often than not takes several minutes before the Kindle detects new content and downloads it. (I often end up using the menu item to sync & check for new items.) This isn't a problem, but it's not as fast as Amazon might lead you to believe.



I purchased the Amazon leather cover for the Kindle DX for about $50. The cover is an absolute necessity for protecting the screen. Given the price of the DX, I really think the cover should have been included.



I really dislike the keyboard, but I don't use it much. Having to hold down the ALT key to type numbers (like "location" numbers in place of page numbers) is really annoying. I can't really imagine using the keyboard for extensive annotation.



Saving several dollars (or more) on each Kindle book purchased helps offset the cost of the unit. There are also a lot of older "classics" available for free or at very low cost.



I have used the wireless Web access and MP3 player a couple times. Both work, but they are very rudimentary, so I don't see myself using either feature very often.



I have not encountered any real technical problems with my Kindle DX so far. It did freeze up once, but I was able to reset it by holding the power switch for about 15 seconds and waiting a minute or two for it to reboot. I accidentally knocked it off my desk once onto a wood floor, but the unit was undamaged (the leather cover helped protect it, I'm sure.)



The battery life is great, but the tiny battery status indicator can be hard to read.



When I ordered my Kindle DX, I had some doubts about its really being worth [...]. Having used it for a while now, however, I would not want to be without it and do feel it will turn out to be a good investment. You pay a premium for the larger format, but it's worth it.






Images Product

Buy Kindle DX Wireless Reading Device (9.7" Display, U.S. Wireless, Latest Generation) Now

No comments:

Post a Comment