Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Amazon Kindle Smartphone to launch in 2014? - 3G.co.uk

Amazon Kindle Fire HDX

Rumours have been circulating regarding the launch of an Amazon Kindle Smartphone for over a year already. In the intervening period Amazon’s range of Kindle Fire tablets have gone from strength to strength, with strong sales leading to an ever-expanding range.

 

Therefore, it’s no surprise to see fresh information surfacing about the potential launch of the Kindle Smartphone. Apparently, the retail giant will launch their first smartphone in the middle of next year (June 2014 to be precise).

 

At least that’s according to Digitimes who claim that Primax Electronic have received orders from Amazon for camera modules to be used in the smartphone. Apparently, Amazon’s smartphone will have 6 compact camera modules (CCM). Yep you’ve read that right 6 cameras, but why?

 

Well, it’ll have standard front and rear-facing cameras but is also rumoured to have four front-facing cameras which are used for 3D rendering and motion control. So you won’t even need to touch the screen to control the smartphone and it could have similar features to Microsoft’s Xbox Kinect sensor.

 

Apparently, the Amazon Kindle Smartphone is being made in conjunction with HTC – so the omens look good. But everything is currently rather speculative and shrouded in mystery.

 

As soon as 3G hear more about the Amazon Smartphone you’ll be the first to know.

 

Source (Subscription)


By Simon Thomas on 31st December, 2013

Tags: Amazon, Amazon Kindle, Amazon Smartphone

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By Simon Thomas on 31st December, 2013

Audiovox mobile TV to support Kindle Fire - Rapid tv news

Show Special

ces-logo

Editor | 31-12-2013

In a telling expansion of its business, Audiovox mobiletv, the Dyle-enabled wireless mobile TV receiver, has been made compatible with Kindle HD Fire tablets.

The new compatibility, made possible through a chipset from mobile TV pioneer Siano, complements existing iOS and Android smartphones and tablet availability for the free live TV service. Dyle comprises a joint venture of 12 major broadcast groups, available in 38 US markets, reaching 57% of the country.

Content delivered includes live broadcast TV such as local and national news, sports and entertainment programming to mobile devices. Audiovox mobiletv includes a programme guide, pause and rewind features, and an internal battery providing up to four hours of television viewing.

“The ability to add Amazon Kindle Fire users expands the growing list of consumers who want the live TV experience at their fingertips and provides our retail partners with another compelling reason to support the product,” explained Audiovox president Tom Malone. “We believe this development, combined with the continued addition of stations and markets, makes this a must-have product for consumers who want to enjoy their favourite programming across multiple screens while at home or on-the-go.”

“With the additional compatibility across Amazon Kindle HD Fire tablets, Dyle mobile TV technology will reach a new target audience that values a range of content on their mobile devices,” added Erik Moreno, co-general manager of Mobile Content Venture, the joint venture's title.

Tags: united states audiovox mobile tv mobiletv dyle kindle fire tablet chipset siano ios android smartphone tablet free live broadcast content local national mobile content venture


Saturday, December 28, 2013

Amazon Kindle e-book stores: Australia v US - Sydney Morning Herald

Digital Life News Technology News
Regional differences: Amazon.com.au, left, and Amazon.com.

Regional differences: Amazon.com.au, left, and Amazon.com.

Amazon’s Australian Kindle e-book store can offer better pricing, but check the fine print.

Next time you shop for e-books at Amazon.com you might be asked if you want to switch to the Australian store. It’s not a permanent switch, you have the option to change it back in your account settings.

At first glance, Amazon’s Australian pricing seems on par with the US store. Tim Winton’s upcoming novel Eyrie costs $ US16.13 on pre-order at amazon.com or $ A17.99 at amazon.com.au – consistent with the 90 cent exchange rate.

If your Amazon account is linked to your Australian credit card then your bank converts US amounts into Australian dollars, but it probably isn’t as generous and you might only get 87 US cents to the dollar. On top of this, there’s often a “foreign transaction fee” of about 3 per cent. The final price will probably be about $ A19.12 – more expensive than if you’d switched to the Australian store.

It’s important to note that Amazon inflates its US pricing for Australian customers. If you log out of Amazon, amazon.com still lists Eyrie as US$ 16.13. Switch on a virtual private network, or VPN, so Amazon thinks you’re in the United States, and the price drops to $ US12.99 – but you lose access to some Australian books such as Matthew Reilly’s The Tournament. Log back into Amazon and Winton’s Eyrie jumps up to $ US16.13 again if your account is associated with Australia. Now Reilly’s The Tournament reappears.

United States
amazon.com

Australia
amazon.com.au

The verdict

The cheapest option is to set up a US Amazon account to access true US prices. Avoid state-based US sales tax and it works out cheaper than shopping from Australia, depending on how you convert your Aussie dollars into greenbacks. But if you’re currently paying Amazon’s inflated US rate then the Australian Amazon store offers a better deal, especially if you want e-books which aren’t in the US store.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Need to rename a Kindle? It's easy - Dallas Morning News

A relative called with a good question: How do you change the name of a Kindle?

She got her young daughter a Kindle for Christmas. The daughter doesn't have credit cards or an Amazon account, so the Kindle was purchased using the mom's Amazon account.

When you buy a Kindle, Amazon names it for you with your first name. For instance, I still have a Kindle Fire HDX that I reviewed last week. Out of the box, it was named "Jim's 2nd Kindle."

I've never owned a Kindle, but I've reviewed two.

When you get a Kindle to review, Amazon asks for the email address you used for your Amazon ID and they pre-register it for you so your content is already loaded when you open it. This is a great service, but in this instance, the Kindle was a gift. It would be really nice to have the daughter's name on the Kindle instead of the mom's.

So how do you change the name? First, Amazon calls the device name the "friendly name."

From your computer, open a browser and go to amazon.com/myk and log into your Amazon account. Your browser should open to a page called Manage Your Kindle.

If you have multiple Kindles, they should be listed there, including devices like Android phones and iOS devices with the Kindle app installed.

Click on the icon for the Kindle you want to change and you'll see a small "edit" link. Click on the link, and a small pop-up box will appear that lets you enter a new name.

Depending on the Kindle model, you may not see the name change until you sync the Kindle to your computer, but newer Kindles will probably register the change automatically.

Follow Jim Rossman on Twitter at @jimrossman.

Amazon Touts Quick Kindle Fire HDX Mayday Response - PC Magazine

Kindle Fire Mayday

When the Kindle Fire HDX debuted in September, Amazon launched its new “Mayday” tech support system with the promise of a human employee at your service within 15 seconds.

Well, Amazon celebrated a Christmas miracle on Wednesday as it clocked an average response time of 9 seconds.

“We set a goal for ourselves to have a response time of 15 seconds or less when a customer tapped the Mayday button—we’re proud to say that on Christmas Day we met this goal, with an average response time of just 9 seconds,” Dave Limp, vice president of Amazon Kindle, said in a statement.

The new Kindle Fire HDX 7-inch and 8.9-inch tablets come equipped with the new Mayday feature, which starts a video chat with an Amazon support rep, who can control your device, draw on your screen, and press virtual buttons.

Any questions about how the Fire HDX works, its hidden talents, or just suggestions for a new game to play can be directed to your Mayday consultant, who comes free with all Kindle Fire HDX purchases.


Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 8.9″

“We’re excited that millions of customers opened a Kindle Fire tablet this holiday season, and we’re glad so many customers tried out the Mayday button.”

Amazon has not revealed sales numbers for the holiday season, but did report that Cyber Monday was the “best ever” for Kindle Fire tablets and Kindle e-readers, as “millions of customers” unwrapped a new branded device this year.

The company

Kindle Fire beats iPad (again) in key Xmas figures - CNBC.com

Amazon’s Kindle got the biggest bump in device activations on Christmas Day, according to data from Flurry Analytics.

Flurry, which tracks 400,000 apps on more than 1.2 billion mobile devices, compared new device activations on Christmas to what the average number for the first three weeks in December and Amazon’s devices came out on top, again.

Christmas Day is always a big day for smartphone and tablet activations for major brands, but Amazon’s devices have seen the biggest jump in activations for the last three Christmases, according to Flurry Analytics.

Devices made by Acer received the next biggest bump on Christmas, followed by Apple and Samsung.

The success of Amazon’s Kindle may stem from its low price. The company sells the mobile devices at cost and makes money by using them as tools to sell digital content and other products.

(Read more: Amazon limited new Prime memberships amid order surge)

Flurry Analytics notes that the new Mayday feature on the Kindle Fire HDX also may have contributed to the device’s activation total. The feature allows someone to get help from a customer service representative, making it easier for first-time users to activate the device.

It’s worth noting though, that as the mobile device market is maturing, most of the manufacturers are seeing a steady decline in the boost from Christmas Day activations.

By CNBC’s Cadie Thompson. Follow her on Twitter @CadieThompson.

Amazon’s Kindle got the biggest bump in device activations on Christmas day, according to data from Flurry Analytics.

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

An Apple Geek's Week with Amazon's Kindle Fire HDX - The Mac Observer

I recently set aside my brand new Retina iPad mini for an entire week and tested using Amazon’s Kindle Fire HDX 7″ as my main (and only) tablet.

I have made it known that Apple’s Retina iPad mini was the tablet I’ve always wanted, and I’ve been extremely pleased since I got mine. But I don’t live in a vacuum, and I know that there are more than a few companies out there who want a piece of this very lucrative market. I bought Amazon’s original Kindle Fire years ago to test it out and while I loved the size, it simply didn’t have the horsepower to be a real contender for me or most folks.

Fast-forward to 2013, though, and there are a few tablets on the market that, specs-wise, compete very handily with the current Retina iPad mini.

I use my tablet like most folks do: web browsing, email (reading and replying), watching movies, Facebook, Twitter, and the like. I also have one very specific use case where I run the Mackie Master Fader app to control my DL1608 mixer for the various bands I play with. Given that there’s no Android app for that mixer I knew this was the one time I would have to break my self-imposed limits and use the iPad. And for an entire week, that’s the only time I used it.

First Impressions

The first thing I noticed about the Kindle Fire HDX was the size. My iPad mini is 7.9 inches and I immediatley liked the slightly-smaller form factor of the 7-inch Kindle Fire HDX. The second thing I noticed was the screen. It has that same, “Retina-like” resolution as the iPad mini, and it’s gorgeous.

I even liked Amazon’s “Special Offers” – that is, the ads that are shown on the Kindle’s lock-screen unless you pay the extra US$ 15 to make them go away. We also found a few ads that the whole family liked, passing the device around for everyone to see. Even though Amazon gave me a credit to use for apps and such on the device for my review, I was never once tempted to spend their $ 15 to turn off the ads.

This is just one of Amazon’s “Special Offers” that show up on the Kindle’s lock screen

My initial impressions were that the Fire HDX was snappy and kept right up with me navigating around, setting up my apps and preferences. I don’t play a lot of games, but I tried a few and they, too, felt snappy and never lagged.

Movies and Music

Amazon Prime members have instant access to a huge library of Amazon’s TV shows and movies, but it’s my own personal collection that I care more about watching. I started building my video library before Apple TV was in the picture, so my movies happily live outside of the Apple ecosystem.

I leave them all on my Synology DiskStation and control most of everything with either Plex or Synology’s Video Station apps. These interfaced perfectly with the Kindle, and my experience with the Plex app on Android was exactly the same with that of iOS: it simply works. I was able to sync movies down to the Kindle for offline viewing, or I was able to stream directly to the device.

Similarly I keep my music library synced to my DiskStation and was easily able to play music using Synology’s Audio Station and DS-Audio apps directly on the Kindle. Media consumption was smooth and silky on the Kindle with no issues whatsoever.

It’s worth noting that Amazon’s decision to place the left-and-right-stereo speakers along the wider edge makes for a very impressive stereo field when listening to music or watching movies. I usually watch full-length movies with headphones, but for trailers or little YouTube clips, this made a huge experiential difference.

Of Apps and Marketplaces

My intention in using the Kindle was not to compare it to an iPad but to simply use it and get a feel – as best I could – for how this tablet would stand on its own. Where that began to fall short for me was when I started looking for apps. The Android app marketplace is fragmented. Amazon has their own, highly-curated marketplace, and that is the only (easy) way to get new apps for your Kindle. The much larger Google Play marketplace has plenty of apps that will work fine on the HDX, but even after jumping through several hoops I was unable to get Amazon’s unit to connect to it.

One example was web browsing. I used Amazon’s built-in “

To be fair, a first-time tablet user may not care or even know about those options, so initially that might not matter. But it’s worth noting that this was a hugely frustrating piece of the puzzle for me.

Typing and Editing

Using this new tablet I expected a few days of adjustment to the user interface, and that’s about all it took. Within about three days navigating around the UI, launching apps and accessing settings became second-nature. I really like Android’s looser rules that allow apps to have not just notifications in the settings pull-down (akin to iOS’s Control Center and Notification Center combined), but apps can also have controls there. Sonos, for example, shows the song I’m playing and allows me to skip, pause or adjust the volume without even launching the app. These are things that us iOS users can only dream of.

Positioning the cursor and editing text on Android is a task too large for me.

One thing I never got used to (and am still unable to do with any degree of success even after weeks and months of using Android devices) is typing and editing text. Yes, the keyboard is different, and yes there are some great third-party alternative keyboards (take that, iOS!), but editing text on any Android device is a never-ending exercise in frustration for me. Every time I try tapping to position the cursor I wind up selecting entire words, and any time I try to select words my keyboard goes away and half the time I can’t get it back.

And I’m a geek.

I don’t know what Google’s doing with Android over there, but I can’t believe they haven’t licked this particular issue yet. Maybe it’s just me (but I don’t think it is). Still, if you’re not doing much typing on it and just reading, watching movies, and browsing the web, this may not be a deal-killer for you.

The Deal

Speaking of deals, this is where the Kindle (and other similarly-sized Android tablets like the Samsung Galaxy Tab 3) totally shine. The price for the 7″ 16GB Wi-FI Kindle Fire HDX is US$ 229. Compare that to the $ 399 pricetag on the 16GB Wi-Fi Retina iPad mini and, despite the typing shortfalls, I have a hard time recommending the iPad mini to anyone looking at the low-end devices.

Sure, if you’re looking for a 64GB device with LTE support, the consistent $ 170 delta becomes a much smaller fraction of the price. But if you just want a tablet to use for routine stuff and don’t care about mobile data or lots of storage, that $ 170 nearly doubles your price.

The Case

I need to make special mention about the “Origami” case Amazon included with the unit they sent me. I’ve used several origami-style, self-folding cases for my various iPads over the years, and every one of them has never lasted more than 4 minutes on the device before I removed it. They’ve always been flimsy and were never enough to hold the iPad steady.

Amazon’s Origami Case for the Kindle Fire HDX is one of the best tablet cases I’ve ever used

Amazon’s

What Bugs Users About the iPad Air, Kindle HDX, Surface 2 and iPad Mini - CIO (blog)

Poor battery life, a paucity of apps, browser crashes and more are just some of the problems plaguing users of four of the most popular tablets now on sale. We know this because FixYa, a popular Q&A site, collected and analyzed more than 10,000 user reports.

Featured in the survey Apple's iPad Air and iPad Mini Retina, Amazon's Kindle DHX and Microsoft's Surface 2.

With exception of the Surface 2, users reported that all of the tablets suffered from browser crashes — a surprising issue since using the Web is probably the most important feature of any tablet. (It's important to note that when FixYa reports, for example, that 30 percent of the users said the iPad Air browser crashed too frequently, that doesn't mean 30 percent of the iPad Airs have this problem. Got that?)

I'm going to summarize the results of the survey; you can read the full report and also learn how to solve some of these problems.

Microsoft Surface
Take a look at your smartphone or tablet if you already have one and notice how many apps fill the home screen and how much you rely on them for work and fun. Unfortunately, the new Microsoft Surface offers relatively few beyond the Microsoft Office suite that comes with the tablet. That was the most common complain of users in the surface, accounting for 25 percent of the complaints. Speaker quality (20 percent) and issue with the touch cover keyboard and a lack of compatibility with other Microsoft products followed at 15 percent eaxh.

iPad Air
Apple's iPad Air has gotten excellent reviews, but it does have some problems. Most common, at 30 percent, is a tendency for browsers, especially Safari, to crash. Fixya users say that opening Web pages that use Flash and opening multiple tables can crash the browser. Particularly annoying is the tendency for the browser to lose open tabs after a reboot. The next most common issue (25 percent) is surprising: Screen issues. Although the Retina screen is beautiful, users report that half of their screens have either a yellow tint overall or faint gray lines cutting across it. That's kind of a bummer for people who bought the iPad Air for its screen, because it’s considered one of the tablet's best features. FixYa does suggest a fix for the problem — so if it’s an issue for you, check out the full report.

Kindle DHX 8.9 inches
Like the iPad Air, browser issue are the top complaint of  Amazon's Kindle DXH users at 25 percent. The pre-installed Silk browser has a variety of issues, most notably choppy performance and a tendency to crash when opening a new tab or navigating to a new page. It's also slow, some users say. Like the Surface, there are simply too few apps (20 percent). There were about the same number of complaints about battery life. Especially annoying, users say, is slow recharge time, a real problem when you're traveling and not always near a socket.

iPad Mini with Retina
Like its larger sibling, Apple's iPad Mini garners complaints (30 percent) about screen quality, though the specifics of the problem are different. Uses say that, when flipping between apps or interacting with any part of the screen that causes the display image to change, the previous image with be lightly visible for a bit. Ghosting, as the issue is called, doesn't actually affect the functions of the table — but since the beauty of the screen is a big selling point, it’s quite disappointing for users who notice it. Lack of storage space and browser crashes, both at 20 percent, are the next most common problem reported.

Image: FixYa

Monday, December 23, 2013

Rand Paul, Cory Booker Kindle Festivus Bromance Over Sentencing Reform ... - Huffington Post

One is the Kentucky-based scion of a libertarian icon. The other is a New Jersey-reared former big city mayor. On Monday, Sens. Rand Paul (R) and Cory Booker (D) came together on Twitter to air their common grievances about mandatory minimum sentences and the war on drugs.

The occasion was Festivus, the parody holiday popularized by a 1997 episode of “Seinfeld.” And just as Frank Costanza once did, Paul and Booker came to complain — but this time for a cause.

Paul has repeatedly bucked Republican stereotypes by championing the end of federal mandatory minimums — laws that force judges to impose harsh sentences, even up to life, for non-violent drug crimes. He’s also had the back of Kentucky farmers in pushing for an end to a federal law that prevents them from growing hemp.

Booker, meanwhile, has been in the Senate for less than two months, but as one of the chamber’s two black members and a witness to the fallout from the war on drugs in places like Newark, he has said criminal justice reform will be at the top of his agenda there.

Here’s the full, sometimes hammy, back-and-forth between the senators. Just months after Paul campaigned for Booker’s opponent in the latter’s Senate race, the two are sharing Twitter high-fives. It’s a bipartisan Festivus miracle.

Also on HuffPost:

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Amazon.in Backs Its Kindle Offer With Dirt-Cheap E-Books - Techtree.com

Time to stack up your virtual bookshelf.

This is the perfect time to pick up a Kindle, as Amazon.in is already offering some amazing offers for the Christmas season. And now the e-tailer has listed quite a sizable collection of Kindle books for as cheap as Rs 99 apiece. A delight for those who enjoy reading for pleasure, the offer will be up till 5th January, so pick up what you want right away.

Not just cheap titles, the collection has some rather recent best sellers such as Jeffrey Archer’s Only Time Will Tell, Sachin: Born to Bat: 1, Unbreakable (Mary Kom), and some excellent reads such as Into Thin Air (Jon Krakauer) and Andrew Marr’s A History of the World. Check out the entire collection here.

TAGS: E-Commerce, Culture, Internet,

How to hack Kindle with LEGOs [VIDEO] - Daily Caller

A University Professor rightfully appear at August way to BYPASS Amazon Kindle’s digital rights security with his laptop, the set of LEGOs, and the little ingenuity.

Vienna University of Technology Associate Professor Peter Purgathofer built to unscrew capable of automatically photographing the pages of an ebook and uploading them to the Internet using his MacBook’s built-in iSight camera and the LEGO Mindstorms robotics-based quits.

WATCH:

The LEGO

whether holds the Kindle in front of the iSight camera and uses the automated Hammer to press the spacebar-Shutter button on the MacBook. Its next function automated presses the button on the Kindle to flip the paddles, Where the process repeats itself. After each picture is taken, the program on the computer could automatically upload it to the cloud text-recognition program and build the entire book in the plain text document.

Any Downloader

book via Amazon Kindle could then be made freely accessible to anyone interested free of charge – after the little bit of time.

“It ended Being the reflection on the loss of the long-established rights When you buy the e-book,” Purgathofer said in the email to All Thing D. “You mark the copy of that book, but at eye-level, the jump that emerges is NOT the Stack of paper, buts Another e-book.”

“The owner isn’t even the owner anymore but RATHER the licensee of the book,” said Purgathofer.

Purgathofer states he hasn’t actually uploaded any pictures for fear of the legal implications, and that it was the private project unrelated to his academic work.

Giuseppe Follow on Twitter

Friday, December 20, 2013

Audiovox's Dyle-Compatible Receiver Adds Kindle Fire To Device Mix - Multichannel News

Receiver Already Supports Apple iOS and Android-Powered Tablets and Smartphones

Receiver Already Supports Apple iOS and Android-Powered Tablets and Smartphones

Audiovox Electronics said it has added Amazon Kindle HD Fire tablets to the family of mobile devices that are compatible with a wireless receiver that supports Dyle's mobile live TV service.

Audiovox said its new Dyle app for the Audiovox mobiletv receiver can run on the Kindle Fire, Fire HDX, Fire HDX 8.9", and Fire HD 8.9" tablets.

Audiovox launched the Siano-developed $ 129.99 mobiletv receiver (pictured at left) in October, offering a device that can capture the over-the-air Dyle TV signals and pass them along to iOS and Android-powered devices using an integrated Wi-Fi radio. Previously, Dyle required a direct hardline connection between the viewing device and the specialized Dyle-compatible antenna.

Dyle, considered by some as a broadcaster-led hedge against services such as Aereo, doesn't deliver its mobile TV signal service over broadband or cellular networks, but instead uses a portion of the traditional broadcast spectrum to beam encrypted, live digital-TV signals that are optimized for mobile devices. Dyle has previously estimated that broadcasters must spend about $ 100,000 on upgrades, primarily encoders, to deliver the mobile TV feed alongside the primary HDTV broadcast signal.

Dyle is operated by the Mobile Content Venture (MCV), a group comprised of 12 major broadcast groups. Its backers include  Belo, Cox Media Group, Raycom Media, Media General, Meredith Corp., ION Television, Fox, E.W. Scripps, Gannett  Broadcasting, Hearst Television, and NBC.

Dyle said it is currently available in 38 markets, reaching 57% of the U.S.

Tags:

Kindle readers make their mark - The Guardian (blog)

If you’ve skimmed the e-ink pages of a Kindle, you’ve probably come across a handful of passages underlined with a slight squiggle, akin to Microsoft Word’s spellcheck. Kindle has for the past few years given users the opportunity to see “popular highlights”: the passages in their ebooks that readers most often highlight or annotate.

The books most highlighted are often the most read – Suzanne Collins’s Hunger Games trilogy dominates the Amazon ranking of highlights. Eight of the 10 most highlighted passages on Kindles are from The Hunger Games or its sequels; the other two are from Pride and Prejudice. It’s interesting to note what people highlight, though. Not the smutty scenes at which a more lascivious reader might surreptitiously bend over a page corner. The highlights reveal that most readers of ebooks are unabashedly sentimental.

Passages with kernels of wisdom are also hot: 5,291 readers found the lines “I have no data yet. It is a capital mistake to theorise before one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts”, in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, worthy of rememberance in our era of instant comment and social media. A line in Danny Dorling’s So You Think You Know About Britain? – “There are more nurses from Malawi working in Manchester alone than there are nurses in all of Malawi” – is typical of the kind of quote highlighted in non-fiction: an easily memorable soundbite upending some widely held assumption.

The classics are understandably heavily highlighted, because they’re heavily read. A passage in Moby Dick – “Heaven have mercy on us all – Presbyterians and Pagans alike – for we are all somehow dreadfully cracked about the head, and sadly need mending” – has been highlighted by 598 readers, who may or may not also be cracked about the head. Anna Karenina is heavily annotated far beyond the obvious “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way”, although that has attracted the eye of 4,086 readers.

The appeal of the shared notes and highlights stems from what’s enjoyable about physical books: picking up a secondhand book or finding a novel in a library, flicking through and finding evidence of who has read it before you. Notes in the margins, underlined passages: an affirmation from a previous reader that certain lines are particularly profound can add an extra edge to your journey through the pages. Or if you’re a particularly lazy student, knowing which passages have caught previous readers’ eyes is a boon. Conversely, readers of The Marriage Plot may find my first ever public note, “I HATE JEFFREY EUGENIDES”, less than helpful.

As an act of intellectual voyeurism, this is all good fun. But it also feeds into a greater appreciation of novels: the high volume of highlighting in teenage fiction is symptomatic of a need to connect. Alarmists who claim that the young don’t read nowadays may be amazed at the evidence in Kindle’s highlights chart of how teenagers linger over fiction. And it’s also social: people can see anything you highlight, so picking out passages is an expression of your better self. It’s a mindful way of reading, but also quite public. When highlighting or annotating any part of an ebook, the eyes of dozens of other future readers are peering over your shoulder.

1. Because sometimes things happen to people and they’re not equipped to deal with them.
Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins, highlighted by 17,784 Kindle users

2. It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, highlighted by 9,260 Kindle users

3. The rules of the Hunger Games are simple. In punishment for the uprising, each of the twelve districts must provide one girl and one boy, called tributes, to participate. The twenty-four tributes will be imprisoned in a vast outdoor arena that could hold anything from a burning desert to a frozen wasteland. Over a period of several weeks, the competitors must fight to the death. The last tribute standing wins.
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, highlighted by 9,031 Kindle users

4. It takes ten times as long to put yourself back together as it does to fall apart.
Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins, highlighted by 8,833 Kindle users

5. “I just want to spend every possible minute of the rest of my life with you,” Peeta replies.
Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins, highlighted by 8,500 Kindle users

The Guardian Launches Native Kindle Fire and Android Tablet App - The Next Web

The Guardian and Observer newspapers are now available as a tablet-specific Android and Kindle Fire app, giving slate owners a new means of keeping up with the latest features, breaking stories and investigative reporting.

An iPad edition has been available since October 2011, so an expansion to larger-screen Android and Kindle devices is long overdue. Tablets, regardless of the OS, are well-suited to digital and web-only publications, and the new app for the Guardian and the Observer is no exception.

g1 The Guardian and Observer newspapers are now available as a Kindle Fire and Android tablet app

You'll need to sign-up to one of the company's subscription packages to access the app, currently priced at £11.99 per month for full access, £9.99 for six days per week (the Observer is excluded) and £6.99 per for just Sunday (the Observer only). A two-week free trial is also available for anyone that wants to see what's on offer before parting with their hard-earned cash.

g2 The Guardian and Observer newspapers are now available as a Kindle Fire and Android tablet app

The new tablet apps offer all of the content from the print newspapers, as well as the supplements that come bundled with the weekend editions. Copies can also be downloaded for offline reading – useful for the morning commute – and stories are presented with a clean, professional layout not too dissimilar to the company's iPad app.

? The Guardian Tablet Edition | Android | Kindle Fire

Image Credit: Scott Barbour/Getty Images

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Mobile device to HDTV connection: Apple TV, Chromecast, Kindle Fire HDX ... - NBCNews.com

hdtv

3 hours ago

IMAGE: Chromecast, Apple TV, Kindle Fire HDX

HD Guru

Chromecast, Apple TV, Kindle Fire HDX

There's a cool new trick possible with a growing number of products: the ability to wirelessly send what's on your mobile device (or computer) up onto your TV. Apple's had this for a while with their products, and now Google, Amazon and others are getting into the act.

It's a feature that's still in its infancy, so it's not perfect, but it's getting there. The experience is also pretty different depending on what devices you've got/are interested in.

Let's take a look.

Apple AirPlay Mirroring
Apple, with their closed ecosystem, was the first to do this kind of screen mirroring/sharing simply and easily. According to Apple, here's what you need:

  • iPhone 4S (or later), iPad 2 (or later), iPad mini, or iPod touch (5th generation)
  • Apple TV (2nd or 3rd generation)
  • Wi-Fi (802.11a/g/n) network

Depending on your device (instructions are in the aforementioned link), the setup is as easy as pressing a few buttons. The trick here, of course, is it's all Apple, and you'll need an Apple TV streaming media player. There's also AirPlay mirroring with a Mac (or via iTunes on a PC). I use AirPlay to send music to my Apple TV over my network from my main PC to my home theater system, and it works great.

Sending images and videos from your Apple mobile device to your TV is the other big benefit. Since AirPlay has been around for a while, I'm not going to get too in-depth with it since if you own an Apple TV and Apple device, I'd be rather shocked if you haven't played with mirroring already (though we'll come back to it in the comparison section). It works pretty seamlessly, and as far as getting content from your device onto the big screen (what we're concentrating on here), it's really the benchmark.

Google Chromecast
If you read our review of the Chromecast, we mention how it can mirror the screen on your computer using a free browser plugin. This works OK, but it's not seamless. After you've connected the Chromecast to your network and installed the Chrome plugin, you're given an option to "Google Cast" any webpage. The quality depends a lot on your computer's processing prowess. My Asus netbook, for example, tried valiantly and ultimately unsuccessfully to stream video. My aging but still more powerful desktop, however, had no problem.

Though primarily designed for webpages, you can drag some files into your browser, and have them sent to the Chromecast. This isn't as seamless as AirPlay, but it generally works OK. Alas, not with all files. This isn't really what the Chromecast was made to do, and it feels like it. Google lists this feature as in beta, so it's not surprising it's comes across as not fully baked. You can make it work, mostly, but it's never as smooth an experience as you'd want.

Since our review ran, several new apps were released that don't quite fill the gap, but do offer specific streaming features. Plex does video streaming, Avia streams all media from mobile and DNLA devices, and RealPlayer Cloud (who knew RealPlayer was still around?) from multiple sources including your phone. Plex and Avia cost money, which I guess is fine since the Chromecast is so much cheaper than the Apple TV, but it's a little off-putting.

The RealPlayer Cloud app will send some of your videos to the TV directly, but some get a "bitrate too high" warning, and need to be uploaded to the cloud first, then played by the Chromecast. Those that do play, at least on my network, tended to pause randomly (like it was buffering, or something).

Right now, the Plex app costs $ 4.99, and requires the $ 3.99 a month ($ 29.99 a year, $ 74.99 lifetime). However, on the app's page on Google Play, it says "The Chromecast feature currently requires a PlexPass, but will be free for all after the preview period." So they're saying if you want to use it now, you have to pay, but they'll give it away for free for those who want to wait. OK, I'll wait. Plex also requires the Plex Media Server to be running on the computer were all your content is. Not a big deal, as this is the PC-to-Apple TV connection too. Currently, Plex only allows video content to be shared with the Chromecast.

Avia costs $ 2.99 for Chromecast support (a one-time purchase after you install the "free" app). it supports pictures, movies, and music, from your phone/tablet, and pulled from any DNLA (Digital Living Network Alliance) gear you have. This latter function works about as well as DNLA ever does, which is to say, marginally, and not for the computer-impaired. If you're looking for a "just works" device, get Apple (and that's from a die-hard PC guy). It's a slick looking app, though, not all files will run. Also, being DNLA, you never quite get the easy access to all your files as you'd hope.

Again, if you're a PC person and want to spend time on setup and getting it to work, this might pass for a non-Apple alternative to AirPlay. However, if you're not computer savvy, it's only a fraction of the simplicity of Apple.

Amazon Kindle Fire HDX
The Kindle Fire HDX has a Second Screen feature, where you can send Amazon video up on your TV… as long as that TV is a 2013 Samsung Smart TV, or any HDTV connected to your Playstation 3. This frees up your Kindle to do other things, while the TV plays your chosen content. The main push for this is an ongoing content-specific datastream of actor names, facts from the show, and so on. On paper this all seems cool, in practice…

The first issue is you need to launch the Amazon Instant Video app on the PS3 for it to work. If I need to go to that hassle, why not just launch the video in that app to begin with? The info that runs during the show is mildly interesting, but poorly implemented and entirely superficial. You get an actor headshot, their name and a few credits, but there's no way to dig deeper (like bringing up their actual IMDb page). I guess it takes out one step in the "who is that guy" process, but if what you recognize them from isn't in the actor's top highlights, you're out of luck. You can't even copy the name to paste into the browser. I watch TV all the time with my phone or tablet, and always look up show info, actor info, tangentially related crap on Wikipedia, so this all comes across as poorly implemented weaksauce.

The other new feature on the HDX is a traditional screen mirroring. It's not quite as easy as the directions make out, but eventually I got a Samsung 6000 and the HDX to talk nice-nice. And then it works exactly as you'd expect. Everything you do on the HDX screen, is mirrored a moment later on the TV. Videos look about the same as they do on the HDX screen, though occasionally the image would stutter, break up, or show some macroblocking. Not a ton, but more than I saw on the HDX's own screen.

Everything else seems to work too, though keep in mind the HDX's screen isn't 16×9, so some things (like web browsing) have black bars on the side. Also, it drains the battery as fast (possibly a little faster) than watching the show/movie on the screen, as you can't turn off the HDX's screen while it's mirroring.

Comparison and conclusion
The Chromecast sort of works to mirror your device, but like the Chromecast in general, you're better off spending a bit more on a Roku, which as a lot more features, like Amazon Instant Video (it also has a Plex app). In reality, the "mirroring" the Chromecast does is merely using your mobile device as a remote control.

If you have a TV that will work with it, the Kindle Fire HDX's screen mirroring does work pretty much as it should. So if you're tablet-centric, and occasionally want to watch a video on your TV (or show images to friends or whatever), it works well.

But as much as Apple haters are going to hate, AirPlay with an Apple TV really is the best option. It works perfectly, and exactly how you expect it to. There are options to do similar things with non-Apple gear, but they remain cumbersome at best and cloogy at worst. In the "what would I give my parents" test if they wanted this functionality, it's AirPlay hands down. Yes, AirPlay doesn't work with non-Apple-sanctioned files, but for the average user I don't think this is an issue.

More from HD Guru:

http://hdguru.com/this-weeks-best-deals-on-hdtvs-and-4k-models/

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http://hdguru.com/samsung-hw-f850-soundbar-review/

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Amazon Kindle App Update Adds Collections, Font Options, And Book Rating ... - Android Police

The ladies and gentlemen at Amazon would certainly prefer it if you read your Kindle books on a Kindle or a Kindle Fire, but for the several hundred million who have a regular Android phone or tablet instead, they’ve improved the eponymous app on the Google Play Store. Today’s update to version 4.3.0 adds a few much-needed features, most notably better organization for your growing collection of books and other documents.

2013-12-17 15.59.31 2013-12-17 16.01.12 2013-12-17 16.04.49

You can now group books into user-created Collections, which is basically a digital alternative to keeping sci-fi on one shelf and fantasy on another. When selecting books to group into collections, you can filter by author or title, and a single book can go in more than one collection. Your selected collections should sync across devices just like your books and reading progress. This is a nice touch for avid readers, especially if their collections are so large that the regular list just doesn’t cut the mustard.

There are some other additions that will affect fewer people, though those who see the benefit will certainly appreciate them. Kindle now handles Android’s Talkback and Explore By Touch features for sight-impaired users better – I’m not a regular user of these features, but the app automatically advances pages when reading them aloud, the lack of which some users seem to have been complaining about. Publisher fonts, which are only supported when the publisher enables them, can now be turned on or off by the user.

2013-12-17 16.19.22

Finally, there’s a new prompt when you reach the end of a book and back out which offers a simple five star scale review that publishes directly to Amazon.com. Unfortunately there’s no way to leave a textual review. You’ll also get a few suggestions based on other customers’ reading habits.

Kindle (Playboard) |

Amazon Kindle Fire HDX down to £169 until 2 January - CNET UK

Read Full Review

Amazon might be having a hard time selling enough of its new tablets, with the price of its Kindle Fire HDX slate slashed by £30 to £169.

The offer lasts until 2 January, so if anyone gets you Amazon vouchers for Christmas this might be worth considering. The retail behemoth cut the HDX’s price earlier in December for “one day only” but that turned out to be not entirely accurate.

Why might Amazon be lowering its price? It doesn’t make much money on its Android-based tablets normally, using them as Trojan horses to get you to spend cash on its digital stores. So it’s probably taking a loss at this point.

It could be because of reviews like ours, which said Amazon’s ecosystem is too closed, so its tablets can’t do nearly as much as its competitors. You can buy a Nexus 7 from Google for £30 more — £199 — and it’ll play video from Netflix and the Play Store and off saved files, unlike the Kindle, which is limited to streaming from Lovefilm. Not much good if you’ve got a long flight.

The best thing about it is a genuine bit of innovation called Mayday, which lets you talk face to face with a tech support person at the touch of a button. They see a copy of what’s on your display so they can help you figure out what to do — perfect for technophobic rellies who might otherwise get stuck.

Its screen is lovely, and the hardware is fast, but because Amazon approves all apps there aren’t as many on its app store as on other Android devices. It’s a bit hobbled, really, but if you want it for browsing the Web and reading ebooks it’ll do fine — but £169 is a lot to pay for just that.

Have you bought a Kindle Fire? What do you think of it? What would you rather have under the Christmas tree? Fire up a comment below, or head over to our cut-price Facebook page.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Kindle for Android adds Collections to help organize your e-library - Engadget

If you’ve bought quite a library of Kindle books for yourself, you might have a chore scrolling through the lot to find the one you want. Thankfully for Android users, you can now organize your reading material into Collections with a new Kindle app update. What goes into a certain Collection is entirely up to you — you may group them by genre, type or whatever category strikes your fancy. As you’re choosing which book goes where, you can filter them by author or title, and unlike your physical library, a single book can be assigned to multiple Collections. Just like your reading progress, those Collections can be synced across multiple devices as long as you’re logged in. The Kindle update brings a number of other goodies to the table as well, like accessibility support for Android’s Talkback and Explore By Touch features so you can flip a page simply by reading aloud and the ability to toggle publisher fonts on or off. You’ll also now be prompted to offer a star rating for a book once you’re done reading it. So if you’re a die-hard Kindle fanatic with an Android device, snag the update and lord it over your Collection-less iOS brethren while you still can.

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The Crazy Stat That Explains Why Amazon Kindles Are so Cheap - Slate Magazine (blog)

164086366 Photo by YASUYOSHI Chiba / AFP / Getty Images

this post Originally appeared in Business Insider.

These days, you can buy a new Kindle e-reader from Amazon for $ 49. Meanwhile, Amazon’s Kindle Fire HDX with the 8.9 inch screen costs $ 379-Much cheaper than the comparable $ 499 iPad from Apple. How and why does Amazon charge for its jump little gimmick? Both questions are answered with one stat GaGa.

During the year

GaGa, Kindle Owners spend, on average, $ 443 more buying stuff from Amazon than the average Amazon shopper who does NOT own the Kindle.

Consumer Intelligence Research Partners that stat derived from the survey survey of 300 Subjects who made the purchase at Amazon.com in the three-month period ending November 15, 2013. CIRP estimates that Amazon Kindle Device Owners spend Approximately $ 1.233 per year buy stuff from Amazon, compared to $ 790 per year for other customers.

“Another Way to Look at Kindle Fire and Kindle e-Reader is as a portal to Amazon.com,” said Mike Levin of CIRP, in the press release put out to announce the study results. “Kindle Fire Provider access to everything Amazon sells, while Kindle e-Reader has Become the way that Amazon customers buy books, Amazon’s original product line.”

Amazon sells Kindles cheap-perhaps at the loss-because it knows getting a Device into the customers hands means that customer ‘ll spend the extra $ 4,500 at Amazon over the next 10 years.

Disclosure: Jeff Bezos is an investor in Business Insider through his personal investment company Bezos Expeditions.

Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) Kindle Proves A Moderate Success In China's ... - International Business Times

Against all odds, Amazon's Kindle has done well in China — the tablets have proven profitable just six months after launching in the oversaturated Chinese market.

Many industry experts were less than optimistic about Kindle's chance in China's crowded electronics marketplace, which is already filled with competing devices from Apple Inc. (Nasdaq:AAPL), Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (KRX:005930) and Lenovo Group Limited (HKG:0992), when Amazon.com, Inc. (Nasdaq:AMZN) launched the Kindle Paperwhite and Kindle Fire tablets on June 7 in mainland China.

In addition, Amazon's model of making money from selling e-books seemed impracticable in China, where online content piracy is the norm.

But sales of the device have "exceeded expectations, and proven very encouraging," said Bai Juyi, vice president of Amazon's Kindle operations in China, the South China Morning Post reported on Tuesday.

Bai did not disclose actual sales figures, but said that while sales in China were not as impressive as Amazon's success in other regions, particularly the United States, Kindle's business model in China has nonetheless been "profitable."

Amazon's international success was the result of slow but consistent growth, Bai said, and the company followed a similar strategy to break into the competitive Chinese market to eventually "build an ecosystem around reading and cultivate a habitual use of Kindle products." Localization, a good relationship with Chinese publishers and Kindle Fire's ability to download Android apps all contributed to the device's current success in China, Bai added.

The Chinese Kindle store carries more than 60,000 titles currently, but the company plans to have that number exceed 100,000 titles in 2014, the South China Morning Post reported.

Despite Amazon's success, easy access to downloadable books on illegal sharing websites remains a challenge for Amazon and other e-book retailers in China. A 2012 survey conducted by the China Press and Publication Post found that 49 percent of female readers, who make up a large portion of China's e-reader market, were unwilling to pay for e-books if they could be found for free online.

The Chinese mobile reading market was worth about 5.6 billion yuan ($ 922 million) in 2012. 

Monday, December 16, 2013

Saving Kindle Notes Online, and Cleaning an LCD Screen - New York Times

Saving Kindle Notes and Highlights

Q. I know how to make notes and highlights in the text of a Kindle e-book, but how do you get all the annotations out of the book file for use elsewhere?

A. Amazon's website stores copies of all the notes and highlights you make in the e-books on your Kindle. To see a list of marked passages and virtual margin notes for each book, log in at kindle.amazon.com with your Amazon username and password, then click on "Your Highlights" at the top of the page.

On the Your Highlights page, you can see a list of all your Kindle books — with all the highlighted passages and personal notes in each one displayed. From here, you can cut and paste the material into a word-processing document, Evernote file or other program you use to stash text.

As explained on the Kindle's Frequently Asked Questions page, Amazon also offers the option to share your online notes publicly with other Kindle users. The company also anonymously lists the passages frequently highlighted by other readers — and the most highlighted passages of all time.

If you are using a black-and-white Kindle, you may be able to copy the "My Clippings.txt" file (which stores your e-book annotations) to your computer, where you can copy it into another program. To do so, connect the Kindle to the computer with its USB cable, browse to the Documents folder and drag a copy of the "My Clippings.txt" file to your hard drive.

Safely Cleaning the TV Screen

Q. What's the best way to clean a flat-panel HDTV LCD screen?

A. Check the manual or online support site for your television to get specific instructions, but definitely do not use Windex or other household cleaning solutions. Many cleaning products contain ammonia, alcohol or other chemicals that could damage the coating on the flat-panel screen.

Even paper towels may cause scratches, so many manufacturers recommend using a soft, lint-free microfiber cleaning cloth to gently wipe down the screen. Some new televisions even include a cleaning cloth in the box, but if you have misplaced it, you can find microfiber wipes at electronics and camera stores.

Depending on the manufacturer, some advise slightly dampening the cleaning cloth with water — or a highly diluted solution of water and mild dish soap for really dirty screens. Commercial kits that include the microfiber cloth and a cleaning solution meant for LCD screens are another option. In many cases, however, these can cost $ 10 to $ 20 to do the same job as a $ 2 microfiber cloth and a dash of water.

TIP OF THE WEEK Thanks to the notifications feature built into iOS, iPhones, iPads and iPod Touches can keep you up to date with alerts from your favorite apps and news sites. If you would like a little peace and quiet from audible notifications during the overnight hours or even during meetings (or naps), you can temporarily silence them all with the Do Not Disturb feature built into iOS 6 and later.

To set up Do Not Disturb in iOS 7, tap the Settings icon on the Home screen and then tap Do Not Disturb. In iOS 6, tap the Settings icon, then Notifications and then Do Not Disturb. Here, you can schedule regular hours without alerts (like 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. for a good night's sleep) while allowing FaceTime calls and messages from specific contacts. In iOS 7, Do Not Disturb can also be turned on and off manually by swiping up from the bottom of the screen to call up the Control Center and tapping the moon icon. Apple has more on using Do Not Disturb at support.apple.com/kb/HT5463.

Amazon introduces interest-free payment plan for Kindle Fire HDX tablets - GigaOM

27 mins ago Dec. 16, 2013 – 5:51 AM PST

If you’re looking to buy a Kindle Fire HDX, but don’t want to plunk down the full $ 229 or $ 379 all at once, Amazon now offers a payment plan that lets you pay the tablet off in four interest-free payments over the course of nine months. Introduced on Amazon’s homepage over the weekend and spotted by AllThingsD, the offer appears to be for the holidays only, available through December 24.

The payment plans are good for either the $ 229 7-inch Kindle Fire HDX or the $ 379 Kindle Fire HDX 8.9. All you have to do is accept the offer on Amazon, add the Kindle to your cart, and at checkout you’ll be charged 25 percent of the tablet’s price, along with any applicable tax and shipping charges in full. After that, you’ll automatically be billed for the balance in three equal payments every 90 days. You can also choose to pay the full remaining balance at any time.

Between this offer as well as last month’s 30-day free trials, it’s clear that Amazon is making a big push for the Kindle Fire HDX. It’s unclear how many tablets the retail giant has sold so far, though it claims that this year’s Black Friday sale was its best ever.

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Amazon announces interest-free payment plan for Kindle Fire HDX - The Verge

After giving 30-day free trials a shot, Amazon has a new master plan to get its Kindle Fire HDX tablets under as many trees as possible this holiday season: a nine-month financing option. According to a new offer spotted by All Things D, you'll be able to pay just 25 percent of the tablet's purchase price up front, with another quarter due every 90 days. And if you fail to pay off the device completely? Amazon says that it has the right to deregister it, blocking access to Amazon content you've paid for, such as your Kindle books.

With the smaller 7-inch Kindle HDX starting at $ 229, most people would probably prefer to just pay for it up front rather than drag it out over nine months, but interestingly, Amazon won't charge any interest on your outstanding balance.

Sensei Wars out now on Android, iOS and Kindle - VG247

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Story by Brenna Hillier

Mon, Dec 16, 2013 | 00:07 GMT

2K Games' experiments in mobile publishing continue with Sensei Wars, a strategic combat affair for Android, iDevice and even Kindle. Gosh.

Sensei Wars is the product of one Cat Daddy Games, and is available now for free on a variety of mobile devices. It has players building and defending a rural village, training an army to conquer other players' camps and steal their resources.

You start off with an immortal Sensei unit, which boasts three skill trees in different fighting styles, but can later call on Monks, Samurai, Ninja and Dragons.

If you find it a bit daunting, you can get together with your buddies to co-op your way up the leaderboards. A trailer follows.