A pal of mine once told me that modern society is running into a technical problem with wireless devices. There are so many of them running around these days transmitting all sorts of data that modern society is running out of wireless channels to use at any given point in time. While the kindle's wireless function is nice it runs into the possible problem of overlaping with another wireless transmission (freqently called cross talk) resulting in a Kindle customer going to download his/her new download to the Kindle and winding up with a news broadcast. This sort of thing is happening more and more frequently these days. I do not know if the kindle has a USB port to surmount this sort of problem but I do not think that it does.
I have examined Project Gutenberg and it suffers from various problems. While the books may be free if you like reading modern novels Gutenberg will be unable to help since it concentrates on the classics and older novels. Second, gutenberg is nice but the web page designers should be shot since the navigation is extreemly dificult. While gutenerberg will show you all of the human read novels it does not have the capability to show just the mystery novels leaving the customer to sift through thousands of novels of all tyoes to find one that is to his/her liking.
Third, Kindle suffers from the fact that it is semi-proprietary. Let me elaborate - the books are available from two sources and the modern novels from one only. A customer does not have the ability to go where ever to get the novels and compare prices, the prices are strictly centraly controled. While one could argue that paperback novels are the same thing, and to some extent you are right I can show how to get a minimum of 20% off the centraly controled price. Freqently I can get 25% and around the holidays I may be able to get as much as 75% off that. There is no discounting ever in Kindle.
I have examined Project Gutenberg and it suffers from various problems. While the books may be free if you like reading modern novels Gutenberg will be unable to help since it concentrates on the classics and older novels. Second, gutenberg is nice but the web page designers should be shot since the navigation is extreemly dificult. While gutenerberg will show you all of the human read novels it does not have the capability to show just the mystery novels leaving the customer to sift through thousands of novels of all tyoes to find one that is to his/her liking.
Third, Kindle suffers from the fact that it is semi-proprietary. Let me elaborate - the books are available from two sources and the modern novels from one only. A customer does not have the ability to go where ever to get the novels and compare prices, the prices are strictly centraly controled. While one could argue that paperback novels are the same thing, and to some extent you are right I can show how to get a minimum of 20% off the centraly controled price. Freqently I can get 25% and around the holidays I may be able to get as much as 75% off that. There is no discounting ever in Kindle.