Yesterday was a big day – my Kindle was delivered. In less than a day of playing, I haven’t uncovered all there is to know about it just yet, but my first impression is that this thing is really, really (really) great. I read myself to sleep last night for the first time in longer than I can remember. It really is like looking at a printed book, with the exception that you don’t need to hold it in two hands (in fact, you can set the font size as large as you need to, so you can just set it in your lap and read), and you just press a button to turn pages.
I’ve already got the thing loaded up with more than its purchase price of free books (not even counting the Oxford English Dictionary and the New Oxford American Dictionary both come with it, which is pretty nifty, ‘cuz you can move the cursor to a word and it’ll display the definition at the bottom of the “page” with an option to view more, see synonyms, search, etc. Not that I need to look up words, of course, but some people might).
It has a web browser as well, which is actually not too shabby, though it’s limited (both by the fact that this is grayscale only and also by the nature of e-Ink, which doesn’t allow for video), but is perfectly acceptable for checking web-based e-mail (which is nice if you’re not near a WiFi hotspot and want to check your e-mail via the free 3G).
Mostly, though, it’s for reading books (and magazines and newspapers, which you can subscribe to – for a price), and unlike a back-lit LCD screen, it’s much easier on the eyes (and, since the only time energy is required is to change the page, not to display it, it uses a lot less electricity; with the WiFi/3G off, the battery is supposed to last for a month between charges).
Oh well, enough of that.
It’s finally Friday – and another 90+ degree day at that. The good news is that I get to leave work a little early today. The bad news is that it’s so I can go to the dentist. Strangely, I’m looking forward to it. As part of my impending midlife crisis (though, truthfully, I’m way past the midpoint and have been on the down slope for quite a while now), I’m pledging to get myself in reasonably decent shape. But I guess I mentioned that before, huh?
Well, that’s what happens when you get old; you repeat all your stories ad nauseum, to the point where people who aren’t related to you just sort of politely smile and nod and think to themselves, “oh Christ, not this story again), and your relatives (especially the youngsters) squirm, fidget, and finally scream out loud in exasperated frustration (at least until you’re finally old enough for them to stick you in a nursing home somewhere and pay somebody else to listen to all your old goddamn stories).
Oh, by the way, did I mention my Kindle came yesterday?
If you’re in the vicinity of the Eastern Seaboard, I hope you avoid the wrath of Earl as he passes by. Up here, we’re just gonna get some blessed relief from the heat (which isn’t even Earl-related, I don’t think), so I may actually get some much needed work done.
Batten down the hatches, and have a good one.
The Weather Channel said it would rain this evening with 15-25 mph winds and gust to 50. It’s a little past 9 AM, and it has started to rain but, there is no wind.
The Justice Department filed a lawsuit on Thursday against Sheriff Joe Arpaio of Maricopa County for not cooperating with an investigation into whether his department was systematically violating the rights of Hispanics.
Obama administration officials called the suit the first time in 30 years that the federal government had to sue to compel a law enforcement agency to cooperate with an investigation concerning Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
“The actions of the sheriff’s office are unprecedented,†Thomas E. Perez, assistant attorney general for the department’s civil rights division, said in a statement. “It is unfortunate that the department was forced to resort to litigation to gain access to public documents and facilities.â€
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/03/us/03sheriff.html?hp
My friends in OBX-NC have some extra water and no power but were seemingly spared by Earl. Let’s hope no one else gets Earled.
pj, your Kindle sounds cool.
pj, your Kindle sounds cool.
How stuck are you with Amazon content?
Is it still cool to say cool?
To the broad coalition of elected officials, political advocates and labor unions that have joined the battle, Mr. Espada is far more than just another ineffective Albany lawmaker. They consider him the personification of Albany’s dysfunction, and they frame the campaign to unseat him as a crusade to reclaim state government from a swamp of scandal and corruption.
Despite the forces lining up against him, the man in the bull’s-eye seems eager to join the fight.
From his office on Bainbridge Avenue, the curtains drawn as the air-conditioner hums, Mr. Espada chuckled. He vowed to defeat his opponents, whom, over the course of an interviews, he dismissed as “outsiders,†“bullies†“limousine liberals†and more. “They’re ganging up on me,†he said. “They’re an invading army coming in and leasing someone in the community to do their bidding, and the people of this district see it for what it is.â€
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/03/nyregion/03espada.html?hp
You’re really not stuck with Amazon content at all. There’s a freeware program called ‘Calibre‘ (available for Window, Mac, and Linux) that, among many other things, will convert books in pretty much any format (CBZ, CBR, CBC, CHM, EPUB, FB2, HTML, LIT, LRF, MOBI, ODT, PDF, PRC, PDB, PML, RB, RTF, TCR, TXT) to pretty much any other format (EPUB, FB2, OEB, LIT, LRF, MOBI, PDB, PML, RB, PDF, TCR, TXT).
You just download, convert (which takes maybe a minute or two), and then either sync via USB to the Kindle, or have Calibre e-mail it to you free Kindle e-mail address, which then syncs to your Kindle wirelessly (which takes less than a minute).
It is indeed way cool, and it is, of course, still cool to say cool.
There is an interesting article in the NY Times Magazine about the influence of language on thought. Such things as gender, tense and direction differ in languages and oblige us to see the world through their prism. It’s not a quick read but, if you like this sort of stuff, engaging. Perhaps even a good use for a Kindle.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/29/magazine/29language-t.html?pagewanted=1&ref=general&src=me
That’s great. I am an Amazon fan. They were a great customer during my days in the music bidness and I use their marketplace to sell my stuff these days with relative ease. I don’t always see eye to eye with Bezos but they don’t reek of Whitman and PayPal.
They tend to be at or near the best price for almost everything I buy, and with Amazon Prime, we get free 2-day shipping, and $3.99 next day shipping. It’s a bit pricey, but I think we order enough to make it worthwhile (especially since Granny is paying for it anyway).
I “found” a catalog of books in rtf format by a particular author that I’ve been meaning to re-read for a long time now, but it would have cost me in the neighborhood of $500+ just to buy the mass market paperbacks. So I converted them for free and am now reading them (and this thing will store 3,500 books, so I don’t think I’ll run out of room for a while).
Well, that’s over with. Now for a fun-filled weekend of not drinking beer. Yee. Ha.