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Amazon Kindle 3 review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £149
inc VAT

It’s cheap, the hardware is fantastic and the range of books is brilliant. This is enough to overlook the annoyance of no ePub support.

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The number of books has dramatically increased and the Kindle store is the best-stocked of any eBook store. Prices are fantastic, too, with most books costing a lot less than their real paper equivalents and some true bargains on offer.

With the 3G version you get free access to the store from anywhere in the world, so you can buy books while lazing on the beach on holiday. With the WiFi-only version you’ll need to be connected to a hotspot, but it’s not too much hassle to sort out your holiday reading before you jet off.

While the Amazon store has tons of choice, if you want to read free books or PDFs you have a choice of ways to get them on to the device. Unfortunately, the popular ePub format is not supported, but free collections, such as Project Gutenberg, have the books available in the Kindle-supported MOBI format.

Amazon Kindle ports

Once you have the files you can either email them to your Kindle-specific email address, in which case they appear on your device or go the old-fashioned route and use a USB cable to connect the eReader to your PC and drag-and-drop files.

If the file types you want to read are listed as not having native support, such as HTML, you have to use the email method, which also puts them through a conversion process. It’s a fairly painless process and is pretty quick.

We found that all of the books we bought from the Amazon store were perfectly formatted to fit the Kindle’s screen. PDF viewing was mostly successful, but the Kindle can only zoom in to the content, it can’t increase font size and reflow text. If you’re trying to read the PDF of a book, it can mean that you’ve either got too-small a font or you have to scroll around the screen. If you want to read a lot of PDF files, Sony’s Readers are far more elegant in their text handling.

Text-to-voice conversion will read pages out to you, but it’s a little bit odd having the computerised voice blaring out of the loud rear speakers. Audio on this device is better suited to Audible spoken-word books, although you may just prefer to use an MP3 player for this instead.

Sony’s new touchscreen readers are arguably more elegant in the way that they handle documents, and their interfaces a little nicer. However, the Kindle is superb value and the store is the best you can get. For pure reading of books, then, the Kindle is the best reader to buy.

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Details

Price£149
Detailswww.amazon.co.uk
Rating*****

Hardware

Viewable size6.0in
Native resolution600×800
Touchscreen y/nno
Capacity4,096MB
Memory card supportnone
Size123x9x190mm
Weight247g
Battery and charge optionsLi-ion, USB
eReader Battery lifeN/A
Wireless networking support802.11g
3G?yes
PortsUSB, 3.5mm headphone

Format Support

eReader TXT supportyes
eReader HTML supportyes
eReader RTF supportno
eReader PDF supportyes
eReader ePub supportno
eReader MOBI supportyes
eReader Amazon AZW supportyes
eReader Microsoft Word supportyes
Audio MP3 playbackYes
Audio WMA playbackNo
Audio WMA-DRM playbackNo
Audio AAC playbackNo
Audio Protected AAC playbackNo
Audio OGG playbackNo
Audio WAV playbackNo
Audio Audible playbackYes
Image BMP supportYes
Image JPEG supportYes
Image TIFF supportNo

Buying Information

Price£149
Warrantyone year RTB
Supplierhttp://www.amazon.co.uk
Detailswww.amazon.co.uk

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