eBooks for the Amazon Kindle
59Digital Ink Reads Like Paper
The Amaon Kindle eBook Reader
The Amazon Kindle eBook reader has recently had a 10% price drop and they are in stock for immediate delievery, unlike the six week or more wait around the holidays.
The Kindle "Killer App" Amazon NowNow Service
This service is amazing for writers and bloggers. Amazon Kindle NowNow is Free with your Kindle and provides accurate, quick answers to questions you 'outsource'. I really can not believe this service is free. For me as a writer and publisher, I can justify owning the Kindle just to have this available to me at any time. I don't alway carry my laptop and write drafts of my web pages and blog posts in a large ruled Moleskine, so the Kindle provides a great source of info while on the go.
Kindle NowNow is an Amazon service provided to answer a question you may have about literally any topic. When you ask a question to Kindle NowNow, Amazon's special support team will surf the Web to find the answer on your behalf. They will then send your Kindle up to 3 answers to each question you ask.
Kindle NowNow is intended for general research only. If you have a question about Kindle or a Kindle order, please contact Kindle Support directly. Simply click the "Customer Service" button in the Contact Us box in the right-hand column of this page to reach our Kindle Customer Service representatives via phone or e-mail.
To ask Kindle NowNow a question:
1. Turn the wireless switch on the back of your Kindle to "ON."
2. If you are not already on the Home screen, press the Home key.
3. Select the "Experimental" option from the Home menu.
4. On the Experimental screen, select the "Ask Kindle NowNow" option.
5. Enter your question in the text entry box at the top of the "Ask Kindle NowNow" screen.
6. Select "Submit" when your question is entered.
Your Kindle will display confirmation that the question is being submitted. You will receive up to three answers automatically delivered to your Kindle, usually within 5 minutes depending on how complicated the question is. The answers are grouped in one item on your Home screen for easy reference. You will also receive duplicate emails of the answers at your Amazon registered e-mail address for easy sharing with others.
All Things Digital: Walt Mossberg with Jeff Bezos on the Amazon Kindle
8:19 Jeff is on stage.
8:20 Mossberg: Why sell hardware like Kindle? Bezos: How we get there is by putting our customer's needs as a priority instead of what we're already good at. You need to renew yourself with new skills. When we looked at e-books, you needed a microscope to find the sales. What we thought is that what people needed was a frictionless way to buy e books. And that required us to build a whole new skill set that would take us like 10 years.
8:22 Mossberg: We're in an time where you need to have factories to make hardware. Bezos: We hired people who knew what they were doing but it still took them time to work as a team. Books needed to be cheaper, too. And we had a competency is making the experience easy to use.
8:25 Mossberg: I liked the seamlessness of buying books, even though I had hardware reservations. How many have you sold? Bezos: We haven't shared this number before so maybe it qualifies as news for you...Kindle sales are 6% of books on the 125k titles available on Kindle.
8:27 Mossberg: Why did you sell out? Bezos: We underestimated. And we're dropping the price to $359 from $399. Mossberg: Clearing stock for a new model? Bezos: No. Mossberg: How many versions? Bezos says many more.
8:28 Mossberg: Kindle is the best ebook reader and I've seen them all. It's the best because of the back end service, like the iPod and iTunes. But what about the whole idea of people reading on a screen with navigation controls? Are you convinced that books will be shifting to digital formats, as newspapers are. Bezos: Yes, but books won't go away much like horses won't go away. (Crowd laughs.) It's hard to find a tech that's stayed in its original form for 500 years. And anything around that long is going to be hard to improve. But that's what we see with Kindle, even though the book has stayed the same for 500 years. And Kindle is good, because it disappears as you get into the flow of the story. Mossberg: Unless the leather case falls off. Bezos: Right! there are things about old books, like loud pages turning when your spouse is sleeping, or the book gets too heavy over time; Kindle is 10.3 ounces. It can't beep at you, like this microwave I had did that 30 second intervals would beep over and over again after my food was done. I call those self important devices! I'll get my food when I'm ready! But you can't outbook the book, so you have to improve on it, doing things like dictionary look up. And changing the font size, very simple thing but much appreciated. But there are big whoppers like delivery of a book in 60 seconds. Mossberg: To me, that's the thing. You guys should have made a better case, but that is the brilliant stroke.
8:33 Mossberg: Could you separate Kindle's whispernet from Sprint? Bezos: We have to think globally so yes
8:34 Mossberg: Are you going to have handwriting recognition? Bezos: There are issues with using a stylus on an e-ink display, and putting something like a digitizer causes visibility reductions.
8:35 Mossberg: People love books and the tactile feel of them. Bezos: Yes, people love horses but aren't going to ride them to work. We're trying to improve on books.
8:38 Mossberg: This is your first hardware device. How do you limit feature creep and define the product? Bezos: This is purpose built for reading. If people want features and they don't detract from that, then we'll consider them. Mossberg: What about web browsing? Bezos: e-ink is not great for that without color and bad refresh, etc. But e-ink is unsurpassed for reading.
8:41 Bezos: You might consider the web the ultimate book that you'd choose over everything else. Mossberg: You might want to go to Amazon.com and order the Kindle Shoe Edition.
8:43 Bezos: When we talk about making products, we talk as missionaries, because missionaries make better products. Someone asked me how much we would spend on making Kindle and I said, how much do we have? We wanted to do this right. Now that 3g and e-ink are coming together, Kindle has a place in the world now. The server side too. There are a lot of pieces being pulled together.
8:45 Mossberg is talking about downloads. How serious is Amazon? Bezos: Very serious. There are a lot of competitors. And Music and Movies have that glamour element, which is unfortunate, because it attracts people (competition.)
8:47 Bezos just announced a web streaming video download service. The system would be pay based.
8:48 Bezos: We've got 5.2 million tracks in MP3 format.
8:49 Mossberg: Are the studios to be fighting with Steve Jobs? Bezos; I'd frame it differently and say it's in their best interest to have a multitude of partners and distributors. Mossberg; I think you're the best positioned to challenge them, even if your marketshare is low. Bezos: If you're a content owner, you want to get it out there in as many ways as possible. That's why you make chocolate and vanilla. Mossberg: So iTunes is going down? Bezos: Laughs, "That's not what I said."
8:51 Mossberg: Can you talk about your cloud storage and computing product, S3? Bezos: These are our infrastructure web services. They allow you to build services in the cloud without owning any hardware. We live in a weird era now, and people build their own data centers. I went on a tour for a 300 year old brewery, and 100 years ago, they had to make their own generator to make their own power. It didn't make their beer any better to make their own electricity, so they went on the grid as soon as possible. This is just like that. You can scale up and importantly, scale down.
8:53 We had a client who went from 5 users to 5000 users in 3 days, and then back down a bit, and you can't scale that if you own your servers.
8:54 Mossberg: Why are you doing this? Will Walt think of Amazon as the people who made elastic computing huge instead of the retail giant in a few years? Bezos: If you're a programmer, maybe. It could be a meaningful thing for us over time, especially if you are an engineer.
8:57 Mossberg: The economy, are you worried about it? Bezos: Our business is doing well and there are some things that help us in this economy, as we've been obsessed with low prices for a decade, and as gas gets expensive, driving a 2000 pound car to pick up 5 pounds of stuff. Mossberg: But your packages come in a truck, too. Bezos: But a route by a postal worker or other is more efficient.
8:59 Questions by the crowd: What about Kindle's DRM? Why, when Amazon does mp3s without drm. The default on Kindle is DRM free, but publishers get to choose. You can't loose things on the Kindle, because we store your books on the cloud. Without thinking about it, you can delete anything on a Kindle and not worry about it. We have the rights from the publishers to let you redownload it again. With music, we had to work with the IP owners over 3 years to get to the DRM free solution. My own view is that DRM free would not slow down sales. Man in Crowd: But if you go to another reader, you lose your copies. Bezos: At the end of the day, it's their decision.
9:02 Another Q: Little question: Amazon.com keeps recommending the Kindle to me, even though I own it. That pisses me off. Walt: That's because you only own one. Man in Crowd: How good are you at personal recommendations and are you going to get better? Bezos: We've been working on it for 12 years and we still make dumb recommendations but we're pretty good at it. We're trying to create serendipity. Say you're coming to the website 1-in-100 times a person says "I really like that!" is to take that 1% chances and take it to 2% and then 3%. (He's making the numbers but that's the philosophy.)
Amazon Kindle
|
Kindle Wireless Reading Device (6" Display, Global Wireless, Latest Generation)
Price: $259.00
List Price: $259.00 |
|
Amazon Kindle Leather Cover (Fits 6" Display, Latest Generation Kindle)
Price: $29.99
List Price: $29.99 |
|
|
Mighty Bright XtraFlex2 Clip-On Light (Kindle Version) Black [Amazon Frustration-Free Packaging]
Price: $19.99
List Price: $19.99 |
|
2-Year Extended Warranty for Kindle (6" Display, Global Wireless, Latest Generation)
Price: $65.00
|
Kindle answers from the Kindle Team at Amazon.com
- RE: 'Kindle answers from the Kindle Team at Amazon.com'
Al: use this link: you will see a link to download the guidehttp://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html/ref=sv_kinc_8?ie=UTF8&nodeId=200127470Reply to this post. - 5 months ago
- RE: 'Kindle answers from the Kindle Team at Amazon.com'
Dog, Are you there? I went to the Kindle support for the download of Kindle 2 User Guide, I had no results. Any suggestions, Tnk-UALReply to this post. - 5 months ago
- RE: 'Kindle answers from the Kindle Team at Amazon.com'
Just a hint to new people -- it would be best to click START A NEW DISCUSSION or find a discussion about your topic. The Kindle team hasn't posted here for many months. This thread is essentially dead.Reply to this post. - 6 months ago
PrintShare it! — Rate it: up down flag this hub


