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The killer feature is that it reads PDFs natively now (i.e., without having to convert them). For someone who prefers to read on screen and who has to read a lot of PDFs, this is very exciting.


This is really cool. I have the Kindle 2 and the PDF conversion on many books is really bad, but especially programming books. However, the Kindle DX looks huge. I'm not sure I could carry that thing around the same way I do the Kindle 2.


As stated a few places. I think this may work well for students that need to carry around many large/heavy textbooks. Since it would still fit nicely in a book bag. However, the price tag is a bit high for students, unless the textbooks are already included :)


Eh, eight semesters in college at $400 in books per semester comes out to $3200. An extra $500 wouldn't make a huge difference, and would make biking up the hill much easier. ;)


Better add the cost of a replacement policy to that total.


Noone else will say it, but I'm sure the piracy will pick up if it gets popular enough.


It sort of seems like it's massively in Amazon's interest if it does, right? They want eBooks to catch on like MP3s did, and the way to do that, it turns out, is a decade of massive piracy before the publishers finally give in.


I don't know if it's in Amazon's interest or not, but at least from my experience at Rutgers, it's more than true. Internal file sharing networks had PDF versions of nearly every textbook used in the CS and Math departments...


I'm thinking of getting my niece one when she goes to college, but that's still a couple years out so who knows what will be available by then. The point is, I'm sure many if not most of the students will not buy them directly but will have them bought for them by their parents, or others just as computers are now.


I'm an original Kindle owner and I hope that they backport the pdf viewing software. Pdf conversion using mobipocket creator gives mixed results.

Also, I purchased some technical books via Amazon where the images appear to be fixed resolution. For example, when I resize the text, the illustration still stays small. Sometimes the text in these illustrations are barely readable.

If I purchase the new Kindle, I hope that they will reconvert some of these books so it can take better advantage of the screen real estate.


Where can those PDFs come from? Can I just send it files from my computer's hard drive and then read them on the Kindle, like an iPod for PDF?


You get a kindle email address. You email PDFs to it and they automagically appear on your device. Although this costs $0.10 a pdf. You can also plug it in and it opens as a flash drive, then you just drag and drop. (In the case of the Kindle 2 you also have to convert to the right format, DX sounds like it will be easier)


Not anymore. http://pragdave.blogs.pragprog.com/pragdave/2009/05/amazon-t...

To summarize: The price of e-mailing your Kindle is now 15c/MB, rounded up.


Much less attractive.


The USB drag-and-drop still works, right? That's not quite as trivial, but still not particularly difficult.


the kindle 2 supports downloading files that you navigate to via the kindle's web browser. i would imagine the new one still lets you do this.


It has a USB 2.0 port.


can it read protected PDFs also? I suppose that i can enter my password with the keyboard.


You can always just strip the DRM off on your computer.


Most NDAs aren't very lenient to stripping protections one of the parties has put on its data. Protected PDFs aren't really consumer products like video and audio, you usually want to follow the rules.


Protected PDFs are how most technical e-books are distributed.


How do you do that for simple password protected PDF's ?


Elcomsoft makes a product that can do it. They charge money, of course. Free alternatives can be found, if you care to look for them.




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