My Kindle Keyboard
Nearly three years ago I purchased a Kindle Keyboard for
Christmas – back when it was $139, and then after Christmas came out with a $79
version. Yeah, I knew it would probably reduce price, like gasoline after a
roadtrip holiday, but I was really excited about throwing more money into
Amazon’s gaping jaws.
I loved my Kindle Keyboard. It was lightweight, more so than
the earlier models as my friends compared theirs to mine. A keyboard, too, how
cool. And wifi enabled. Trouble at my fingertips with the Kindle store so…right
there and handy. I held the device in one hand and clicked on either side to
turn the pages as fast as I wanted.
The screen was not backlit, which was okay with me. I bought
the cutest little clip on reading lamp. The Kindle text was black and white, which again was
okay with me. I don’t normally spend a whole lot of time gazing at the cover of
a book. I’m usually inside the pages, reading it.
Text to speech: cool, especially for when I’m too tired or
otherwise occupied (driving/treadmill) to listen. Sure the either male or
female voice is a bit mechanical, but good for a major giggle especially when
you know that same mispronunciation was coming up.
Loading books and docs from whispersync or the computer was
fantastic. PDFs were a bit of a pain as they didn’t usually get big enough to
read comfortably, or if large enough, went off the screen.
Being able to manually change from vertical to horizontal
screen, or physically hitting keys to adjust both text size, line spacing, and
so forth, was much appreciated.
The battery charge lasted, really, a good month, even with
my usage. It came with a multi-use plug which had both a wall outlet plug and a
computer plug.
Then the keyboard started adding lots of extra symbols when
I tried to type certain letters. I ignored it, because I rarely take notes in
the text, and because I truly did not need to keep buying more books.
Then the page turning buttons on either side decided to take
over and either turn forward or backward when I touched them—that is, quite often,
backward on the upper right and forward on the lower left, and vv; I swear I
heard giggling once. I tried to deal with that for a month or so when I figured
that touching such and such a button jumped two pages ahead and quickly hitting
the other button made it go back one (the next page, for reading purposes),
but, really—I paid how much for this?
I got in touch with a Kindle rep on instant messenger at the
advice of forums – which are really handy, by the way – who told me, sadly, my
Kindle keyboard could not be repaired and they would replace it for a fee. Or take
some off an upgrade.
Kindle Fire
Thus my Keyboard Kindle, like a phoenix rising from the
ashes, became a Kindle Fire.
Yeah, it was my choice. I’d been researching the Barnes and
Noble Nook. My mother in law received one and while the features on it were
somewhat lacking—really, no computer interface to register and buy online while
you’re hooked in; you must do so through wifi—the price at the time of $159 was
sounding okay. But I knew I wouldn’t be able to transfer the way over a hundred
books (some of which I actually paid money for), and movies – yeah, got me –
over to the other side, which totally sucked.
So, the nice customer service lady said she could send me a
$199 Fire for the incredible price of $169 if I wanted. I sighed deeply and
said, “So, my $139 two and a half year old Kindle is only work $30 trade-in value to you?” and
she cyber-sighed deeply and replied, “No, ma’am. Your Keyboard Kindle is no
longer under warranty and the replacement cost for your version is $30.” Since we know we can’t
replace a Kindle with $30, and it was only $10 more than the Nook Color, I
sighed deeply and said sure. She hooked me up with the sales rep who said he
was sorry I was having all these problems and to surrender the nonworking
Kindle by returning it UPS with the enclosed printable mailing label, but I
could keep the connector cords, otherwise I’d be charged the full price of the
Fire. Since Amazon started charging $10, and I see, now $20, for the wall adapter,
I figured I came out another $20 ahead. (And yeah, I know, that’s blonde for “it’s
on sale.”)
My Kindle Fire
Is a heavy little device, which I could have discovered from
actually reading the stats online. It says right there, shipping weight: 1.7
pounds, where the Keyboard is 8.7 ounces. One third the reason I wanted an
eReader is because I don’t have a lot of feeling in my hands, and it’s a bit
stressful holding open a book. The KK was like hardly holding anything. The
Fire has to rest on something, and no, seriously, I am not paying the $30-35
for the cute little fold-up cover and backrest.
The Fire is a small tablet computer device, so I understand that
it’s heavy.
It gets warm.
The battery charge only lasts a few hours, so keep the cord
handy, especially if you’re playing online.
It’s backlit. Love that. So much sweeter to read in the car
and at night.
Keyboard interface is pretty cool, but I have little fingers
and can see where others would struggle and want that stylus, which might
scratch the screen eventually.
It’s color. I don’t honestly know that I’d have forked over
the extra $60 for it, but then again, even a movie on the weensy screen while I’m
treadmilling can make me happy.
Airport screen motion – just flip it and the text flips with
you. Love that.
E-mail. Pretty cool.
Apps. Yeah. Cool. Someday I’ll figure out how to advance in
Angry Birds.
There seriously is no text to speech feature. I checked in
the Amazon Kindle forums and learned that I am not the only buyer who is
shocked by this. I had purchased an auxiliary cord in prep for listening to my
books while driving. Alas, I cannot. All I can think of is that since Fire has
Audible.com as a major advertiser, Fire won’t allow speech-enabled eBooks. Have
you looked at Audible’s prices? C’mon.
There is no 3 or 4G capability with the Fire. Okay, so I
didn’t look before I bought, but why would I since the step down models have
that service. I had to wade through the entire humiliation of setting up the
network (well, my kid did it for me) at McDonald’s to access their wifi
network. Totally unfair.
So…if I would have thought about it more carefully, I would
have stayed with the Kindle Touch 3G for $139 (would I have gotten it for $109 with my trade-in?),
and just kept on using my laptop for the movies. I don’t regret -yet- the
purchase (not really an upgrade, as an eReader doesn’t have to be a tablet
computer), but I think I would have been happier with a Kindle Touch for the
reasons I wanted an eReader to begin with: lightweight (13.6 ounces shipping
weight), and large print with the bonus text-to-speech. The movie thing is
sweet, but not worth $60 to play and in light of the heaviness and inability to
keep a charge something I regret.
October 27, 2012 update: friend Kathy Rouser showed me her Nexus. Next time: YES. I'd do that one first. It looked awesome, color, 12 ounces, sound enabled, wifi, and you can download both Kindle and Nook aps. She even had one of my books. How awesome is that.