Video: Hands-On With the Kindle 2

Gearlog was on hand at the Morgan Library and Museum in midtown Manhattan for the launch of Amazon’s Kindle 2. The latest version of the company’s popular ebook features a number of improvements over its predecessor. PCMag executive editor Dan Costa got some good hands-on time with the gadget–enough, in fact, to write a preview of the device.

He also, thankfully, had both a video camera and an experienced Amazon representative to take him through the paces. Check out an up close and personal view of the hot new device, after the jump.

Fujitsus Color Screen eBook Trumps the Kindle in More Ways Than One

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Perhaps I posted too soon. Moments after I spent a few paragraphs lamenting the lack of a color screen on the new Kindle, our editor-in-chief sent me a link to a news piece about Fujitsu’s new ebook reader. The new reader features a much larger screen–about the size of a standard screen. Better still, the thing’s in color.

The device is based on Fujitsu’s FLEPia technology, utilizing wireless data management. The reader is a skinny 12-mm thick and features Wi-Fi, USB 2.0, an SD slot, speakers, Windows CE5, 50 hours of battery life, and a touchscreen instead of a keyboard.

This device seems to trump the Kindle 2 in every way, except for one key point: price. The Fujitsu e-reader will run you around $900, which make the Kindle’s steep $360 price tag look like chump change. Looks like I won’t be reading comics on it any time soon.

Why Kindle 2 Isn’t a Big Step Forward For Voracious Readers

Now that we’ve seen Amazon’s Kindle 2, unveiled by Jeff Bezos today in New York, I can’t help but conclude that the more powerful machine provides only a slim additional reader benefit. Here’s why:

There are improvements that make the Kindle 2 marginally better for readers, like faster page turning, smaller better page-turn buttons, longer battery life and the ability to charge via USB. None of the rest of the tweaks affect the actual business of reading directly or indirectly, and even these upgrades probably won’t turn Kindle 1 owners an envious shade of green:

20% faster page turning: It nice because flipping ahead several E-Ink pages can be annoying—but it’s not what’s needed to make a real difference. You still can’t leaf through a Kindle book like a real book, and that won’t happen until the page refresh is 100 times (maybe 1000 times) as fast.

Smaller inward-press page-turn buttons: The original’s big right-hand page-turn button was annoying, but you just learned quickly how to pick up the device without touching it. This is definitely an improvement—especially with its MacBook-like click tension—but not a forward leap.

Longer battery life: It already ran for a week or more with 3G turned off, but now it can go two weeks—my guess is, there’s a point in there where people simply find time to charge their Kindle.

Charging via USB: The best Kindle 2 benefit has been largely overlooked. Now that you can charge while connected to your computer, or charge using any old mini-USB cable or charger, you aren’t likely to run down the battery unwittingly, or live at the mercy of Amazon’s proprietary power brick.

Let’s look at the other improvements, and see why they don’t matter at all for actual reading:

Better screen detail: This might be nice for looking at pretty pictures, but words are perfectly readable on the first-gen Kindle. Update: Our buddy Josh Quittner at Time mentioned that the real travesty is that E-Ink hasn’t gotten more white, for higher-contrast reading. And where’s the font support, so that your favorite magazines and newspapers actually look like they’re supposed to?

Thinner body: The first Kindle was already thinner than any book I take to bed, even the original mass-media paperback of Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49. It was also very light, so not a problem.

Seven times more memory: Even that kid in Magnolia could’ve packed all his books into the first Kindle’s 256MB of storage. This memory upgrade—2GB, or 1,500 books—only helps people who are using Kindle for multimedia stuff, and who does that? The memory bump is probably based on market availability: The 2GB chip was probably cheapest one offered by the manufacturer. Update: Commenter Noobs-R-Us reminded me that the thing is also missing the freakin’ SD reader, so the 2GB is all you get, take it or leave it.

Text-to-speech reading: I admit that, if the interface navigation can also be read aloud, this will be a great boon for blind people, but until voice synthesizers start to sound like Peter O’Toole, consumers won’t take this over Audible when they’re heading out on a road trip.

Here’s what either didn’t get fixed, or in fact got worse:

File conversion: There’s still no native PDF support, in fact PDF, HTML, DOC, JPEG, GIF, PNG, BMP are all available only through a conversion process, one that costs money. Update: Commenter Gilbert points out there is a cumbersome but totally free way to send docs to Amazon and get them converted and emailed back—it seems the 10-cent charge is for transmitting to your Kindle directly.

Screen size is the same: I’d rather have a bigger screen (like the insanely expensive iRex 1000S) than a “better” screen.

Lack of rubber backing: Since the back is now slick aluminum and plastic, there’s a greater chance of the thing slipping off the sink and into the toilet. What, you don’t read in the bathroom?

No more sparkle cursor: Instead of a weird but fast independent cursor to the right of the display, you now highlight stuff directly on the screen, which is slower.

The Beez says that the “Kindle vision” is “Every book ever printed in any language, available in under 60 seconds.” That sounds fun but buying books will never be the plot of some Nicholas Cage movie. The selection was already good and getting better all the time, and the first Kindle had the same fast book delivery. This should not be the vision. The vision should be making Kindle even more book-like.

Before they address the needs of some hypothetical super weakling who has the aesthetic sense of Jon Ive, the cerebral voracity of Rain Man and the vision of Mr. Magoo, Amazon must address the needs of very real readers who read only a few books and magazines at a time, who like to download classic non-copyrighted lit and work-related documents for free, and who like to leaf through pages randomly. This last thing is important, though it may be insurmountable: Airport-friendly page turners don’t really require non-linear random-access reading, but everything smart from Harry Potter to Infinite Jest does, and that’s one concern that the Kindle, or any ebook reader, still does not address well. [Kindle 2 on Gizmodo]

Amazon, Stephen King Launching Kindle Today

Amazon isn’t really much when it comes to mastering suspense. For about a week and a half we’ve all been assuming that today will be the day the online retailer launches the second iteration of its popular Kindle e-book reader, a fact that The Wall Street Journal confidently confirmed, earlier this morning.

What is news, however (aside from said seeming confidence), is who they’ve chosen to help launch the device–an actual master of suspense, Stephen King. The absurdly prolific author was tapped to pen a new work which will be available exclusively on the device (a Kin-sclusive?).

The work (which King no doubt will pen on his way to the event) will be published by Scribner, appearing on the device first, possibly followed by a print version at some point. According to The Journal, the latest book the Cell author will feature a “Kindle-like device.”

Amazon Kindle 2 Event: We’re Here!

We’re inside the Morgan Library, where Amazon is unveiling the the Kindle 2 right now. Our liveblog is on fire! [Gizmodo’s Kindle 2 Liveblog]

Analyst: Amazon Sold 500K Kindles in 2008

Amazon_Kindle_NYT.jpgAmazon has been famously coy about how many Kindle e-book readers the company has sold. But Mark Mahaney, an analyst at Citigroup, is estimating that Amazon sold 500,000 of the things in 2008, and that the Kindle is on track to become a $1.2 billion business for Amazon by 2010, according to AllThingsD.

The report said that Mahaney came up with his figure by examining a recent filing by Sprint, the company that handles the Kindle’s wireless data connection for over-the-air e-book purchases from Amazon. The $1.2 billion figure is a little more suspect, though; essentially he assumed that the Kindle equals the iPod, will do similar business to the iPod at a comparable point in its life cycle, and that customers will buy one e-book per month from Amazon on average.

Meanwhile, everyone—including, presumably, Dick Cheney—is waiting for the other shoe to drop next week, when Amazon has its press conference and unveils Kindle 2.0. Mahaney thinks the new Kindle will be thinner, lighter, have a nicer keyboard arrangement, and cost $299 instead of $359 like the current model. Me, I’m just hoping for page turning technology that doesn’t flash the entire screen each time.

eSlick E-book Reader Aims to Undercut Amazon Kindle

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The upcoming eSlick Reader doesn’t look like much. But its target price point of $230—significantly less than the Amazon Kindle and Sony e-book readers—could make it a tempting buy, especially since it will be the first hardware e-ink device to support eReader files, Wired reports.

The support for eReader files is important. That’s a popular format that currently displays on smartphones like the iPhone, as well as Windows Mobile and Symbian-based handhelds. This means that people who already have a well-stocked e-book library can buy the eSlick Reader as a nice screen upgrade from what they’re currently used to, while circumventing the annoying DRM problem that plagues the Sony and Amazon devices—which only work with e-books purchased from their respective stores.

Of course, things can change if Amazon unveils the Kindle 2.0 next week.

CES 2009: Astaks Mentor eBook Reader

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It turns out that Sony and Amazon aren’t the only two companies in the eBook game, these days. A (unfortunately named) company called Astak has just tossed its motarboard into the ring with the Mentor.

This eBook reader features a 9.5-inch screen, stylus-ready touchscreen, displaying pages at 8.5 x 11-inches. The device has built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth capabilities, 4GB of built-in memory, and should be able to display around 5,000 pages on a single charge, according to the company.

The device also has an SD card slot, and, like pretty much everything else these days, can play Mp3s.