Sunday, March 1, 2009

I’ve Become a Kindle User

The Decision to Purchase a Kindle

I showed Linda the demo at the Amazon store. She asked about prices.

I showed Linda some price comparisons. Since I purchased James Patterson’s Run For Your Life today at Costco (Art Linda’s stepfather likes his books.), I’ll use it for the price comparisons. Costco sold it for $15.09. Amazon sells the hard cover for 16.79, and the Kindle version for $10.00. That’s a five dollars savings from Costco.

More importantly, I don’t have to buy a book right away to get the savings. I have Traitor to His Class by H. W. Brands, Nothing to Fear by Adam Cohen, American Lion by John Meachem, The Coldest Winter by David Habertam, and Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin, sitting on my book shelf waiting to be read, because Costco had them at such great discounts. Most of the books above could have been purchased for the same price or lower via the Kindle store.

Then there is The Panic of 1907 by Robert F. Bruner and Sean D. Carr. I purchased it at Borders, for 30% off the $ 30.00 cover price, using a coupon. (I have to go to my Hotmail account and print the coupons). That still doesn’t get close to the $10.00 at the Kindle store.

I figure in most cases, we would save approximately $5.00 per book. At the rate I read books, the Kindle will pay for itself in approximately 18 months. Linda liked the idea.

Kindle Blows Books Out of the Water

I’m reading Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow. It is over 700 pages of small print. It weighs almost 3 pounds and is 2 ½" thick (it can be used for a weapon or a bar bell), versus the Kindle’s 1.5 pounds and less than ½" thick. If it were on my Kindle, I would be able to increase the size of the print. If I don’t know the meaning of a word in the book, I have to go to my iBook and look it up, or one of the two volumes of my 1968 World Book Dictionary (I can now use the dictionary that comes with Kindle). The ebook version would allow me to move the cursor in front of the word, and the definition would appear at the bottom of the page.

It’s easy on the eyes. I can read outside, without the sun reflecting of the page, causing me to see spots.

Oh yea, you can download a sample of the book. That would have been a blessing, before I purchased Debby Applegate’s The Most Famous Man in America: the Biography of Henry Ward Beecher. I seen her speak on Book TV, and she made her subject seem captivating. The book could be used in lieu of sleeping pills.

The Down Side


The price, bye bye 2 or 3 person Kayak.

The magazine selection. We can get Time delivered to the house for 20.00 a year in color, why pay 17.88 a year for a black and white version? (Why pay any amount for the magazine?) If they had The Economist, I would get a subscription.

Amazons shipping. They sent this via United States Postal Service in conjunction with FedEx. Pony Express would have gotten it here faster. It shipped from Campville, KY on February 22nd. It arrived in Orlando (approximately a 2 hour drive from here) on the 24th around 1300 hours. It didn’t leave Orlando until approximately 0200 hours February 26th. It was delivered here on the 27Th. They charged me approximately 10.00 for this “service”.

I took measurement of the box, gave it a weight of 10 pounds, and checked UPS. This would have taken 2 days to reach me, and it would have cost the same amount of money in shipping.

Conclusion

I’m so happy with it, I even read the instructions that come loaded on the devise.

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