Astronomy Books on the Go…

E-books have emerged from the shadows with Amazon’s recent launch its $189 Kindle e-book reader and service.

And Amazon provide a wind range of astronomy-themed ebooks that can be downloaded into the Kindle for those who like to read on the go, have several books to hand without being weighed down by them or the awkwardness of carrying them, who like to annotate their books, etc.

Here’s a list of Amazon pages that list astronomy ebooks designed for use with their Kindle Reader:

So as you can see, there’s quit a selection available in the Kindle Store. Ebooks are easier to tote, easier to store, and easier to read than their paper brethren.

The concept of Sony’s Reader , the first significant contender in this market, was solid, but its hardware wasn’t that impressive. Though Amazon’s Kindle design is less glitzy, its usability touches are enough to make it a really useable e-book reader.

Amazon integrated a 3G cellular radio into the Kindle and uses its new Whispernet EvDO service to wirelessly transmit e-books to the Kindle. You don’t need a PC to make a purchase: Just browse the Kindle store and download your reading material. Notably, no service charges or contracts are involved – Amazon covers all of that in the background.

Kindle: The iPod of E-Books?

Can Amazon do for the fledgling e-book market what Apple did for the digital music market? Perhaps.

Amazon doesn’t sell just books of course, but books are certainly perceived as a cornerstone of this Web retailer’s business. If you’re looking to buy a book, logically you might turn to Amazon. It’s a well-known brand after all. Competing e-book approaches don’t have that advantage.

So who will the Kindle appeal to? Folks who are ready to take their reading digital. Avid readers who are running out of shelf space for their books. Commuters who are tired of wrestling with newspapers while getting ink on their fingers.

Who will stay away from the Kindle? Travelers who want to read on an airplane during takeoff and landing, when you can’t use electronic devices. Readers who enjoy a good book in the tub or at the beach. People who aren’t already comfortable with digital gadgets. And mainstream shoppers may find the Kindle’s high price a turn-off.

For some buyers, though, the price won’t be a deterrent. The conveniences I’ve cited may be enough to sway them, or perhaps the Kindle’s integrated wireless networking and no-PC-required approach may be appealing. Maybe they’ll appreciate the savings over buying physical books.

Despite the Amazon reader’s somewhat bland design and the fact that this first-generation device leaves some room for improvement, the Kindle and its corresponding service have succeeded in rekindling an interest in reading e-books.

Unassuming, Functional Design

The Kindle, which is larger than the average paperback book but not as thick, won’t wow anyone with eye-catching good looks. It’s a boxy rectangle of white plastic with a matte finish (though it comes with a leather cover). A 6-inch electronic-paper display covers the top portion of the device; a keyboard dominates the bottom quarter.

The keyboard, with its rectangular keys set mostly at an angle, is easy to use. A rubberized surface on the back of the device makes it comfortable to grasp.

The Kindle supports up to 2GB SD Cards, but unfortunately the slot is located beneath the removable back plate and is not readily accessible.

Amazon’s has paid attention to detail in other respects. The unit’s thickness tapers from left to right, making it easy to hold. The taper dovetails with the angled Next Page button that runs the full length of the display along the right side; the rocker-style design makes moving forward a page easy, no matter where your hand is holding the device. This is an important detail if you’re reading a long novel, since poor design leads to muscle fatigue.

The other navigation buttons are conveniently situated around the display. The Previous Page button runs down two-thirds of the screen on the left side, while a second Next Page button takes up the lower third (this arrangement is useful for left-handed and right-handed people alike who want to mix up their repetitive page-turning motions). Beneath the Previous Page button is a small Back button and a rubberized scroll wheel.

Logical Layout

The Kindle’s design is finger-friendly. The scroll bar/select wheel combination lets you scroll to menu options by using the wheel, and then push the wheel in to select options.

Pushing the wheel also calls up a context-sensitive pop-up menu. For example, when you’re shopping in the Amazon store, the menu offers to take you to Home, the Kindle store, Top Sellers, New & Noteworthy, Recommended for You, and ‘Save for Later’ items. The latter option allows you to bookmark items you stumble across while browsing so you can find them again before proceeding with another purchase.

When you’re at the Kindle’s Home screen, the pop-up menu offers to send you to the Kindle store, check for new items, change the device settings, and manage content, moving items from the Kindle’s 180MB of user-accessible memory to an SD Card and back again.

This menu also offers “experimental prototypes” that include a basic, text-friendly Web browser and a background MP3-music player.

While reading, you can use the Kindle’s select wheel to highlight a passage or choose where to make an annotation. You can then e-mail a highlight to a friend or access your notes – stored as text files – via the Kindle’s USB connection.

Some Minor Quibbles

The screen has a gray, somewhat indistinct quality that resembles the appearance of newspaper. The monochrome screen supports four levels of gray-scale. There are no problems reading the display under a multitude of circumstances, including in bright light. Since the display lacks a backlight, however, it’s not readable in dim lighting.

The text is mostly clear, though a few characters may show jaggies. A button on the keyboard lets you switch among six different font sizes. One important note for those who require large-print text: The biggest size is actually larger than the text I in large-print books.

Downloading E-Books

Shopping for e-books via the Kindle store is similar to being on the Amazon site. Books take less than a minute to download, and their prices vary; new releases and New York Times bestsellers cost $10. The Kindle store offered 90,000 titles at launch.

You can browse or search for book, magazine, newspaper, or blog content at the Kindle store. When you find something you like, select the item to see further details, including a description, the sales ranking, customer reviews, the print length, other titles that customers bought, and the list price for the paper version of the book.

Once you find a title you want, you click on Buy and the e-book downloads to your device automatically. You can continue shopping or read other content already on your Kindle. If you purchase something by accident, you can cancel your order immediately.

If you’re browsing Amazon on your PC, you can also initiate your purchase there and send the e-book to your Kindle: Amazon clearly shows when it has a Kindle version of a book for sale. You could also have the title sent to your PC and then transfer it to your Kindle via a USB connection.

While an e-book file can reside on both your PC and your Kindle, you can’t read it on your PC. You can’t send an e-book to someone else, either; they have to buy their own copy. Though Amazon doesn’t limit the number of copies, the title is tied to your Kindle device.

Amazon archives your purchases on its servers. If you lose or delete an e-book, you can download it again. That’s nice forethought – invariably, Kindles will get lost or broken, or you simply may need to delete something on the fly to make room for an eleventh-hour book purchase you made just before your next flight.

While you’re reading a book, you can look up words in the built-in dictionary, highlight a passage and store it locally or send it to someone, and annotate passages. The last page you read automatically becomes a bookmark – the part of the text that appears when you return to that title.

Beyond Books

The Kindle’s Web browser is handy for quick news, weather, or Wikipedia lookups. Not as useful is the Kindle’s stab at daily relevance with its newspaper and blog delivery, which Amazon charges you for even though those services are available for free via a Web browser.

Granted, once you subscribe, the company delivers the daily blog content to the device so you can read it on the go (or in the air), but the arrangement still feels like nickel-and-diming of customers.

You can subscribe to 11 newspapers, 308 blogs, and a handful of magazines. Choices include the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Houston Chronicle, the San Jose Mercury News, Time, Fortune, the Atlantic Monthly, Le Monde, and Slate. Amazon delivers the content to your Kindle so you can read it on the go. By contrast, Sony’s Reader provides blogs and RSS feeds for free.

Every Kindle comes with a customizable e-mail address, which allows you to e-mail Microsoft Word, plain-text, HTML, JPEG, GIF, PND, and GMP files – for 10 cents a pop. You can’t read files directly from the SD Card, as they need to be converted to a Kindle-friendly format. There is no support for Adobe PDF or direct file support – those features would have been a real boon to users, and they’re already available on Sony’s Reader.

One last plus: Kindle can also play audio books from Audible– competing e-book readers don’t have this option.

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Filed under: Astronomy Product Reviews