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Turn Your Netbook Into a Kindle

May 11th, 2009 @ 9:42 am

5 Comments

Categories: Computers, Gizmos and Gadgets, Travel Tips

Tags: Netbook, Netbooks, Nettops & MIDs, E-books, Hardware, Personal Technology, Rick Broida

Before you drop $359 on a Kindle 2 or $489 on a Kindle DX, ask yourself this question: What does a Kindle have that your netbook doesn’t?

Granted, a Kindle is thinner and lighter, and its battery lasts a lot longer on a charge. But netbooks have bigger, brighter, backlit screens (in color, no less), and they double as computers. (Last I checked, the Kindle couldn’t run Word or load Web pages.)

So why not use the netbook you already own to read e-books, Kindle-style?  Here’s how.

One of the Kindle’s big perks, of course, is Amazon’s unsurpassed library of available e-books, which currently tops 275,000. But e-booksellers like eBooks.com, eReader, Fictionwise, and Mobipocket (which, interestingly, is owned by Amazon) offer plenty of mainstream, business, and academic titles. (eBooks.com alone boasts 168,000.)

You can also stock up on public-domain classics from Project Gutenberg, which catalogs tens of thousands of books, all free for the download. And speaking of free, if you have a live Internet connection, Google Book Search makes a whopping 1.5 million titles available.

Different e-booksellers require different software for viewing their books. Alas, not all the viewers let you rotate the screen for a more book-like reading experience. Fortunately, a free utility like EeeRotate does the job.

So, there you have it. A netbook may require a bit more hoop-jumping for reading on the run, but it’s a lot more capable than a Kindle and, depending on which model you buy, less money. (For example: You can get the mega-popular Eee PC 1000HA for as little as $290 shipped.)

Me, I’m pretty happy reading e-books on my iPhone — but I’d definitely opt for a netbook before spending money on a single-purpose device like the Kindle. What about you?

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  •  
    1

    pmhesse

    05/11/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Turn Your Netbook Into a Kindle

    You can actually load web pages on a Kindle; go to the advanced menu, and pull up the basic web browser. Currently my Kindle2 is 1/6th the size and weight of any netbook out there, contains lifetime free 3G service, and lets me get to plenty of web pages, RSS feeds, and most of what I look at a computer screen for. No, I wouldn't want to word process on it, but that's not what it is for.

    Also, you can't make this recommendation unless you've tried reading a book on a netbook screen for 5+ hours at a time, about how long a cross-country flight takes. You can't, because backlit LCD screens are not ideal for this purpose. (Also, the battery probably won't last that long.) The e-ink screen found on the Kindle and Sony's EBook reader is far gentler on the eyes, and gives me weeks worth of page turns before needing a charge.

    An e-book reader is an e-book reader, a netbook is a netbook; while both *can* do things the other is suited for, that isn't and shouldn't be their goal.

  •  
    2

    BizHacksRick

    05/11/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Turn Your Netbook Into a Kindle

    Fair points, all, but I guess it depends on what kind of reader you are. I can't sit and read for 5+ hours period, whether I'm looking at a paperback, an iPhone, a Kindle, or whatever. At the most I'll read for an hour or so, then go onto something else.

    I'd also note that a netbook lets you read unlimited blogs, RSS feeds, etc., without charging extra for it.

    Make no mistake: I think the Kindle is very cool. I just think it's seriously overpriced given its capabilities.

  •  
    3

    rodman_arabi

    05/13/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Turn Your Netbook Into a Kindle

    several points here: 1- a netbook is less comfortable to hold which will become tiring if you intend to seriously read a book.
    2- the electronic ink technology of kindle makes it very easy to read. again for prolonged reading, text on a netbook screen can hurt eyes. with Kindle that's not the case.
    3- most computer screens are made for horizontal viewing. In some screens it's difficult to read text shown in another orientation.
    But after all I'm a believer in dedicated devices. I'd never use a kindle for web browsing or listening to music. i think devices should be designed with specific uses in mind.

  •  
    4

    kaixza

    05/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Turn Your Netbook Into a Kindle

    e-books on your iphone?

    Do you have an article about that?

    I tried to upload (from my pc) and download to my iphone using Stanza but it won't work...

  •  
    5

    adamruggle

    07/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Turn Your Netbook Into a Kindle

    I woudl like the text-to-speech, can you get a netbook to do this with a kindle book?

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