Thursday, November 20, 2014

Amazon Kindle Voyage review – Wired.co.uk

Amazon
  • Wired

    High-resolution screen; automatically adjusts brightness levels according to ambient light; squeeze pads for turning pages

  • Tired

    Much more expensive than other Kindle models; no dedicated high-end software features

  • Price

Perhaps it will come as no surprise to hear that the newest and most expensive Kindle from Amazon is its best ever. But it really is. The price tag could be sticking point, however. At £170, the top-of-the range Kindle Voyage is the most expensive ebook reader Amazon has developed yet, but with similarly remarkable electronic ink tech available at a remarkably affordable price in the form of the £60 Kindle, has Amazon undercut itself?

Screen

The screen on the Kindle Voyage was made for those mammoth reading sessions in which night or day, no matter how fatigued, you just can’t put a book down. Its 300 pixels per inch display is very high resolution for a device of this type and therefore very kind on your eyes.

To stop you from squinting in the darkness, the Kindle will automatically adjust to new lighting situations so, as time goes by, will get lighter or darker as your eyes start to adjust to the changed visibility conditions. This is almost imperceptible, in the way of discreet five-star hotel service — you feel comfortable and taken care of, and yet there have been no interruptions to your private time.

Squeeze me

As well as the actual device being the thinnest and lightest Kindle ever, the Voyage has some other tricks up its sleeves that we haven’t seen on previous models. Running down each vertical bezel is a line and a dot. Squeeze the line and the page will flick forwards and squeeze the dot and the page flicks back one.

This obviously makes it ideal for lefties and means that most of the time you don’t even need to lift a finger to turn the page (just shift your thumb a bit instead). The Voyage provides noiseless haptic feedback that you can only feel in your thumb. Over time it becomes more sensitive — Voyage newbies tend to squeeze harder out of excitement, which was definitely true of WIRED.co.uk’s reviewer.

It’s a boon and a novelty and perfect for those lazy days on a sun lounger when you’re lying on one side holding the Kindle up to help shield your eyes from the sun as you read (just don’t try and balance it on your face if you decide to have a nap). But it is also to an extent a luxury. Touching the screen to turn the page is not all that more difficult than squeezing the bezel — not £110 more difficult at any rate.

It should be mentioned that there are some great features on-board the Kindle, including expanded X-Ray — which lets you look at the “bare bones” of the book — and a smart lookup tool that integrates X-Ray, dictionary and Wikipedia information about the book in one place. On their way are other features — enhanced search, family libraries and Word Wise to help you understand more complex books. All great, but these features are also all available on the £60 Kindle.

The Voyage’s main competition aside from Amazon’s other products is the Nook Glow — a lovely, light ebook reader with similar light-emitting technology to the Paperwhite and a 6-inch screen that costs only £90. Of course this locks you out of Amazon’s ebook ecosystem, but if you’ve yet to invest in a device, that is not necessarily a problem.

Conclusion

Amazon revolutionised the hardware people used for reading for the mass market in a way the human race hadn’t seen for centuries, but innovating such a low-tech activity comes at a price. As it always has done, the luxury of reading lies in the content itself rather than the more disposable vehicle that delivers it.

The Kindle Voyage is a fabulous device that we wouldn’t hesitate to endorse, but ultimately we couldn’t recommend to someone that they should pay to upgrade from a recent older model. Similarly, if you’re debating between the cheaper and more expensive Kindles, you are probably better off going for the £60 device and spending the change on stocking up your ebook library. The exceptions to this are if you have no choice but to read in the dark, or if your name is Moneybags — in which case, go wild and enjoy.

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