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nicklauscombs wrote: » still dumbfounded as to why the kindles including the new ones do not support epub.
petedude wrote: » 1. ePub is a hair removed from most online ebook formats; including it might make the paid formats easier to hack? 2. Why give access to free books instead of making you buy them? They only include PDF access because they know customers would gripe about not being able to read white papers, work memos, etc.
erpadmin wrote: » As I got more involved in my studies, I haven't really been using my Kindle 2. Amazon has a lot of free books that should be required reading for anyone....(books that are out of copyright and in public domain.) Two in particular that should be in anyone's Kindle collection: Machiavelli's The Prince and Sun Tzu's The Art of War. Price I paid for them: $0.00. If tablets are that much better e-readers than Kindles in the regard that epubs and PDFs are readable, then Amazon will have a problem. I tried reading a PDF on my Kindle once, and vowed never to do it again (until they improved upon it...) I have a feeling this year's Black Friday will be good for tablet sales...here's to hoping.
Devilry wrote: » I asked for a Kindle for my birthday from the lady of the house, I was so excited to use it for studies. Within 24 hours I realized what a let down this was and was so frustrated, although I could not show it, as it would hurt her feelings. Now I am trying to find a good priced tablet to use. If you want to use PDF, run from the kindle!
Claymoore wrote: » I disagree. I have a Kindle DX, which was the first Kindle to support PDFs, specifically to study and transport my tech library. The PDFs from my MS Press books were OK at first and then very readable after an eventual Kindle software update. The PDFs from the Cisco books were crap - it looked like the page included the dotted lines along which the printer should cut when they assemble the book. Could be the version of Adobe used to create the PDFs, but other PDFs I tried were fine. PDFs on a normal 7" Kindle or Kindle Fire would be too small to be readable, particularly if they have technical diagrams. For Tech books you should stick with the DX, an iPad, or other 10" tablet.
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