Pesan: 38
Bahasa: English
sudanglo (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 12.06.40
Some Kindles have keyboards and some don't. So the first questions is, why should I need a keyboard.
Some Kindles have WI-FI. Is this an advantage for capturing free books in Esperanto off the net, or something you could only use for downloads from Amazon?
Are there any snags (unexpected inconveniences) a Dummy should know about before purchase? All advice welcome.
hjhj (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 14.25.20
As far as downloading Esperanto books, Amazon doesn't have too many, but plenty for my limited knowledge of Esperanto. A search on Amazon for "esperanto" gave 47 results for Kindle, mostly for learning it. I don't know much about finding books online because Amazon has lots of free books for Kindle.
On my Kindle, you have to have Wi-Fi to get books from anywhere, but again, I don't know what the new ones are like. Mine doesn't have 3g and I haven't found that to be a problem, though if you don't have consistent access to a Wi-Fi, it might be worth the investment.
erinja (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 14.37.55
Iaino (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 14.47.29
hjhj:As far as downloading Esperanto books, Amazon doesn't have too many, but plenty for my limited knowledge of Esperanto. A search on Amazon for "esperanto" gave 47 results for Kindle, mostly for learning it. I don't know much about finding books online because Amazon has lots of free books for Kindle.Project Gutenberg has free books and a few are in/on Esperanto.
If you're into SciFi/Fantasy, there's the Baen Free Library (none in esperanto, as far as I know).
I think there might be others, but I these are the ones I recall off the top of my head.
Iaino (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 15.01.11
sudanglo:Some Kindles have WI-FI. Is this an advantage for capturing free books in Esperanto off the net, or something you could only use for downloads from Amazon?Primarily for delivery of books to your Kindle from Amazon. However, there is also a web-browser, so if you chose, you could browse the web from the Kindle. I don't recall if I've downloaded a book from anywhere other than Amazon via the Kindle's WiFi. Perhaps I'll give that a try today.
If you want to go without WiFi/3G, then you'll be using a USB cable to connect the Kindle to your computer and drag the desired files (books) to the Kindle.
hjhj:On my Kindle, you have to have Wi-Fi to get books from anywhereYou don't have the transfer cable? For mine (Kindle 3), the transfer cable is also the 'charging' cable. The cord's USB plug, plugs into the outlet connector (which I hardly use, since I tend to charge off the computer's USB port instead).
Iaino (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 15.12.17
Iaino:I don't recall if I've downloaded a book from anywhere other than Amazon via the Kindle's WiFi. Perhaps I'll give that a try today.I went ahead and gave it a try, I browsed to Project Gutenberg using the web-browser, searched for Burroughs and downloaded "Princess of Mars" which was quickly available on my Kindle for reading.
qwertz (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 15.12.30
Sony Reader PRS-T1 Review | Amazon Kindle 3 Review
erinja (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 15.47.37
Therefore I wouldn't reject the Kindle due to lack of epub support.
qwertz (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 16.08.32
erinja:You can use calibre software to translate epub files into a format that Kindle can read.Yes, I know. Hopefully that convert process doesn't change the original text layout and other functions. I don't know in detail if EPUB can contain layout which Kindle's AZW doesn't support and reverse. Reading that conversation guidelines let me in doubt that conversation from EPUB to AZW goes without hassles. I assume that Calibre does a god job and probably mostly conversation goes correctly. Everybody should decide by oneselves. For me, epub support is an central decision feature.
Therefore I wouldn't reject the Kindle due to lack of epub support.
RiotNrrd (Tunjukkan profil) 29 Oktober 2011 16.44.27