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[personal profile] sawyl
Thanks to my parents' generosity, I've had a Kindle since the start of December. And I'm totally convinced. Actually, I was convinced within the first five minutes — as long as it took me to read the quick-start guide and get myself going — but I thought I'd wait a little longer before committing myself.

I'm completely convinced by the screen quality and the battery life. While it's not as good as an LCD for interactive stuff, the e-ink display is clear and crisp and much easier on the eyes than a backlit display, and with my usage patterns — heavy reading and light wifi use — I've found that I seem to be able to get 2-3 weeks out of a single charge. Most satisfactory.

I like the convenience of the gadget and smoothness of its integration with the Amazon store. There's something wonderfully decadent about being able to order a new book from your bed first thing on a Sunday morning, without having to worry about opening times or traipsing down to the bookstore in the rain or whatever, and to have access to it within a matter of minutes. The first time I did it, I realised that our SFnal future had finally arrived.

But I'm particularly taken with the economic size of the ebook reader. No longer am I forced to schlepp tens of books with me when I go away for any length of time. Nor do I have to worry about carrying books bought on holiday back home with me and nor do I have to worry about my chronic lack of shelf space.

Of the features that I don't like, only one really bothers me: I want page numbers. Although the lack of page numbers doesn't bother me as a recreational reader — locations work perfectly well for most of the things I want to do — as a sometime academic reader, the inability to cite a particular page really troubles me. This nullifies the greatest benefit of the eBook — it's searchability — because although this greatly speeds up the process of finding the relevant sections of a text, it means that to cite them, you still need to go off and reference a printed copy. Maybe this will change over time and Amazon locations will become an accepted reference, or maybe someone will step into the gap and provide a conversion service that maps locations to page numbers in printed editions of a particular text, but until something like that happens, I'll be forced to keep buying or borrowing academic books in dead tree format.

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sawyl

August 2018

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