Amazon Kindle

Revision as of 15:57, 24 March 2012 by Admin (Talk | contribs)

A portable reader (eReader) based on electronic paper technology. The purpose of the Kindle is to provide a solution for getting and keeping a large number of books on one small device, and for reading them in a more natural and enjoyable way than is possible with other electronic devices.

Models

1st Generation Kindle

Released 2007. Discontinued.

2nd Generation Kindle

Released 2009. Discontinued. A slimmer form factor, improved battery life, and a higher performance E Ink display.

This model does not support WiFi. It can connect via Whispernet using the Sprint cell phone network. You can also connect it to a PC with the USB cable and copy downloaded books from the PC to the Kindle 2.

There is a hack which can allow the Kindle to network to the PC via the USB cable for tcp/ip connectivity as an alternative to Whispernet. Ref: Kindle 2 hacks: bypassing Whispernet

Kindle 3

Released 2010.

Fourth Generation Kindles

Kindle

  • 6 inch e-ink display
  • five hard keys, a cursor pad
  • on-screen rather keyboard
  • flash storage capacity of 2GB

Kindle Touch

  • 6-inch E-ink screen
  • infrared touch-screen control

Kindle Fire

  • Android-based tablet
  • color touch screen
  • no 3G option

Whispernet

Amazon has an agreement with Sprint so that the Kindle may use a Sprint cell tower free of charge for the Kindle owner. Within the U.S. use of Whispernet (Kindle accessing Sprint) is free. Webbrowsing is free, receiving of books and SINGLE-issue magazines are free.

Whispernet makes use of the high-speed network established by the wireless cell phone provider Sprint. This network, in turn, uses EVDO technology, which is faster than other mobile wireless networks.

When you activate a menu (by pressing the Menu button), your wireless status is indicated by a 1X or 3G icon that appears to the left of the wireless coverage bars on the top line of the Kindle screen. The Kindle uses the 3G network when it’s available; otherwise it uses the slower 1X RTT network.

Web and Internet

The Kindle isn’t a fully-functional Web browser, but it lets you browse Wikipedia and other text-oriented Web sites, where you can check your e-mail and perform other common functions. The Kindle gives you free wireless access to the Web. And you don’t have to pay a monthly fee to use your Kindle to go online.

Sources

 

 

Last modified on 24 March 2012, at 15:57