Amazon’s Cheapest Kindle Just Got Even BetterFrom What Peter Korn said on one
of the podcasts, A number of schools have these. With what Amazon did to make
them accessible, blind people have access to the books.
From: Mary Otten
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2016 11:47 AM
To: vi-kindle@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [vi-kindle] Re: [vi-kindle] RE: [vi-kindle] Re: [vi-kindle] Re:
[vi-kindle] Amazon’s Cheapest Kindle Just Got Even Better
OK, but it's more expensive than the fire tablet. That has been on sale for $40
recently. Why spend more for less? You can still just read books with the
tablet.
Mary
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 23, 2016, at 11:32 AM, Sherry Gomes <sherriola@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Because maybe all we’d want to do with it is read books.
From: vi-kindle-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:vi-kindle-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] ;
On Behalf Of Mary Otten
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2016 12:22 PM
To: vi-kindle@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [vi-kindle] Re: [vi-kindle] Re: [vi-kindle] Amazon’s Cheapest Kindle
Just Got Even Better
This is strictly for reading Kindle e-books. It has nothing to do with any
other functions of a regular tablet, including the cheaper fire tablet. It's
just for book reading Kindle book reading. And maybe you can send documents to
it like you can't to the fire, I'm not sure. I honestly do not know why any
blind person would want this when they can get the fire and a memory card for
the same or less money and have more functionality.
Mary
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 23, 2016, at 11:18 AM, lana <lana5@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Let me understand this. My iPhone has 32 gigs. This has 512 megs.
Is that why it is so much less expensive? Will it play anything other than
kindle? Bookshare using Voice Dream reader? or Audible? I’m pretty sure we
earlier ruled out bard. Is that why a tablet or a full iPhone would be better?
Or am I missing something
From: Russ Kiehne
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2016 7:32 AM
To: Vi-Kindle
Subject: [vi-kindle] Amazon’s Cheapest Kindle Just Got Even Better
Amazon’s Cheapest Kindle Just Got Even Better
Amazon is refreshing its entry-level $79.99 Kindle e-reader with a thinner
and lighter design and double the amount of memory, the company announced
Wednesday. The new model is available now for preorder and will be launching on
July 7.
The updated e-reader will include 512MB of memory compared to the previous
version’s 256MB. It will also be the first Kindle with Bluetooth audio support.
This means visually impaired Kindle owners will be able to connect their
e-reader to headphones or a speaker via Bluetooth to have content read out loud
without needing an adapter.
Amazon is also making it easier to export notes and highlights from a book
by adding the option to send such excerpts as a PDF and a spreadsheet file.
This capability will be coming as a software update in the coming weeks.
Read more: How to Pick the Right Amazon Kindle For You
Amazon’s most affordable Kindle remains otherwise unchanged for the most
part. The most noticeable difference between the $80 model and its more
expensive siblings its lack of a built-in light for its screen. Other, pricier
Kindles, like the $199.99 Voyage and $289.99 Oasis, also feature controls
alongside the screen for turning pages.
Amazon is also now offering the $119.99 Paperwhite version, which Amazon
says is its most popular Kindle, in a white color option in addition to black.
https://www.yahoo.com/tech/amazon-cheapest-kindle-just-got-140530121.html
Sent from my iPod