Tag: Amazon Kindle (Page 3 of 3)

Is the Kindle DX Smart Enough for College?

The Amazon Kindle DX.With Amazon’s announcement of the Kindle DX, sites like Wired have been polling students to see just how successful the device might be. Turns out, not too many people are turned on.

For starters, the device comes in at a hefty $500, a price that makes schlepping twenty pounds of books to class seem reasonable. And once you’ve paid for the device, how much is each title going to cost? And what of reselling options? College students are crafty, thrifty buggers who would sooner share a textbook between five people than part with precious beer money.

If cost of ownership wasn’t a glaring enough problem, there’s still the functionality of the device. As one student said, everyone has a laptop now. Why carry two devices? And what if someone needs to borrow your textbook. Do you loan them your $500 DX? And isn’t old tech like a highlighter or a pen working faster for note taking than the DX’s sluggish input system? And, and, and, and, and?

All of these questions are simply answered by tech strategist Michael Gartenberg.

You can’t introduce technology like this, which has got a lot of breakthrough things associated with it, and expect it to be business as usual. The reason the iPod worked was not only did it introduce new technology, but it introduced a new business model for the technology as well.

For now, everyone is still comparing the Kindle to the old medium, books. It now falls to Amazon to make the $9.8 billion textbook industry rethink their methods of distribution and publication to make this device truly viable. If Amazon can keep themselves from getting too greedy, they just might pull this thing off.

Source: Wired

Sweet Gadgets That Fell Short

Interesting article by popularmechanics.com this week. Here they explore “5 Design Flaws that Ruined Otherwise Smart Gadgets.”

Storm

In order for a touchscreen to be successful, the user needs to feel that he is in constant control, and for this, responsiveness is key—even small lags can prove immensely frustrating. One recent offender of this rule is the Blackberry Storm, RIM’s first touchscreen phone.

Some history: Before the Storm was released, there was a lot of buzz surrounding its supposedly ground-breaking touchscreen, which depresses like a button, giving users a satisfying “click”.

But when users and reviewers actually got their hands on their device, the real shock was how buggy the whole thing was. The touchscreen suffered from long delays—often a second or more—that made users yearn for their old button-based Blackberry. And completing simple tasks took an unnecessary number of steps. For example, inputting the letter “C” involves putting one’s finger on the letter, waiting for the phone to respond by highlighting the letter, and then pushing down. All that for a simple letter.

I can definitely agree with some of this. BlackBerry, for instance, had a good vision when designing the touch-and-click function in the Storm, but the execution was less than stellar. Have you tried this thing? Press and hold, press harder, wait for it… wait for it… and click. Are you kidding me? That’s the ultra-innovative touch-screen we’ve been waiting for? Please.

I can’t agree too much with the Wii Remote. After all, they did include a wrist strap with every Wiimote. If you choose not to use the wrist strap, that’s at your own risk.

I’ve already touched on the Kindle vs. the Kindle 2 here, so I won’t go there right now.

Check out the article and let me know if you know of any sweet gadgets that have a clear miss in the design.

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