Horizons Blog
Return to Innovation

The new Kindle 2 electronic reader is shown at an Amazon.com news conference Monday.

(Mark Lennihan/AP)

Photos (1 of 1)

Kindle 2: ‘better than a book’?

By Chris Gaylord | 02.09.09

Amazon’s PR folks must have loved this particular user testimonial. During the company’s big unveiling of the second-generation Kindle e-book reader on Monday, CEO Jeff Bezos played a series of reviews from customers who bought the original Kindle and then got a sneak peak at the updated version.

“It’s better than a book,” said one.

While there’s plenty of room to debate that line, the device reboot no doubt improves on the first Kindle in several ways.

The new reader is 25 percent thinner, now 0.36 inches (the iPhone is 0.48 inches). While taller, it weighs slightly less than the original. It quadruples the shades of gray from four to 16, allowing for better pictures and crisper text. Digital “pages” turn 20 percent faster than before. Battery life jumped by 25 percent, which Amazon claims will allow the device to run for two weeks on a single charge.

Beyond simple percentages, the Kindle 2 comes with a 250,000-word dictionary that allows readers to look up terms in mid-sentence.

The tablet-shaped device will also read books to you. This text-to-speech function sounds a little robotic. But it will turn the pages while it reads aloud, letting commuters read during breakfast, listen in the car, and then easily pick it up again to read during their lunch breaks.

With free 3G wireless service, the Kindle 2 can download new books in six second, Mr. Bezos says. These e-books have been a growth business for Amazon. According to the company, 10 percent of Amazon’s e-book sales are now for or through the Kindle.

Amazon’s booming e-library will soon include The New Yorker, Gizmodo, and Stephen King up-coming novella “Ur.” Mr. King’s latest will be exclusive to the Kindle, at least for now.

The device’s price tag has not changed: $359. Shipments begin Feb. 24. But if current Kindle owners order the new one in the next 24 hours, they can hop the line and receive theirs first. As ZDNet chief Larry Dignat put it: “Translation: Amazon will still have a line and hasn’t figured out its manufacturing issue.”

Now that the press conference is over, reporters get the afternoon to play with the Kindle 2. We’ll update you on their impressions when they come in.

<< 3-D enthusiasm is anything but flat | Main

Comments

1. John Skillman | 02.09.09

I have a SONY Reader and it IS better than a book. Is an iPod better than a CD player and a stack of CDs? Same thing. An entire library at your fingertips on a device that can be read in direct, bright sunlight is amazing.

2. Joel Smith | 02.10.09

We are retired and live in Lake Chapala, Jalisco, Mexico. Although we are not kindle users yet, we will be soon. Friends of ours are avid Kindle users and it’s a great way to get the latest books in English here in Mexico.

Joel Smith
Casa Preciosa Ajijic, Mexico

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

Leave a Comment

  By clicking "Submit Comment", you agree to our Terms of Service.

We do not publish all comments, and we do not publish comments immediately. The comments feature is a forum to discuss the ideas in our stories. Constructive debate - even pointed disagreement - is welcome, but personal attacks on other commenters are not, and will not be published.

Tip: Do not write a novel. Keep it short. We will not publish lengthy comments. Come up with your own statements. This is not a place to cut and paste an email you received. If we recognize it as such, we won't post it.

Please do not post any comments that are commercial in nature or that violate copyrights.

Finally, we will not publish any comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence.