I’ve been meaning to write this for a bit – I’ve had my Kindle now for about 3 months (since Christmas) – and wanted to write down some of the things I think about it.
The most interesting observation, I think, is that it’s simultaneously one of my favorite things, and also mostly invisible in my life. I use it every single day for at least 15-30 minutes and some days for considerably more. Since the new year, I’ve read probably 8 books this way, compared with 3 or 4 traditional form books.
A few random observations:
The display works great – the resolution is not quite what I expected, but not bad at all, and is fine for reading even over a long period of time. I think they could have done a better job with the typography, with more tweakability in terms of fonts and layout preferences. I routinely change the type size when I’m reading, depending on how tired I am, etc. Book layout gets screwed up pretty routinely, especially in books that have any images at all. Not totally debilitating, but distracting, certainly.
UI-wise, I think it’s good enough, but not fantastic. The designers were pretty limited by the screen refresh characteristics of eInk – so had to do some decidedly indirect things for many of the interactions. But on the whole, it’s fine. I’ve been highlighting passages in the books I read in order to go back and look at them when I’m done – that’s a really neat feature – but it’s in an embryonic state at the moment. I’d like to be able to access them via the web, not just my Kindle, and would like to have them be more like a database than a text file, which is what they are now. Being able to search in books is theoretically neat, and I’ve used it a couple of times, but not really all that useful so far.
I really thought that I’d miss the physicality of books, but I’ve been surprised that I don’t miss it one bit. I thought I’d miss the feel of the pages, the images on the cover, etc – but I don’t. On reflection, I’ve realized that most of that stuff is marketing – not the intent of the author at all, in general – and as a result, I’ve found myself paying much more attention to the text, and feeling closer to the authors. Surprising to me. What I think I’ve discovered is that while I thought I loved books, what I actually love is reading.
The weirdest side effect of doing most of my reading through the Kindle is that people don’t know what I’m reading – that’s great on airplanes and in public, but I like it less at home – my wife doesn’t know what I read now, so doesn’t ask as many questions about it. That’s disappointing, since I like talking about the things I read. I still bring up things I’m interested in, but I miss the other direction. Thinking a few years down the road, I’m certain that our son will use some sort of eReader for text books for school – and as parents we’re going to need to know what he’s reading – that’s an opportunity for someone, of course!
The related problem, for me, is that I tend to lose track, visually, of some of the more interesting books I read. I’ve been getting tired of having shelves and shelves of books at home, but I pretty routinely find myself looking down one shelf or another, and noticing books that I read a while back that I want to re-read, or to think about again. WIth the Kindle, you can browse through what you’ve read, but it’s a little bloodless, so it’s making things like Delicious Library seem sort of appealing to me. But I’m not 100% sure that’s the right solution, either.
Sharing is another disappointing aspect - I’ve read a few books the last couple of months that I’d really like to just hand to my friends. There’s no way to do that, and it’s disappointing.
A million other thoughts about the system, ranging from big picture (I wish it were more open and less DRM-ed, for example) to small (the unit seems almost designed to show dirt on the casing; the dictionary – while fantastically useful – could be easier to use) to mostly irrelevant (not a good web browsing experience – IMHO they should have just left the browser out).
But on the whole, while I don’t know that the Kindle will be the device that ultimately wins, I do know that the advantages of electronic, networked books are too significant not to become ubiquitious over time. It’s early days, and this is really just the 2nd generation or so – but for a broad, broad set of uses, it’s obviously the way things are going to go.