Kindle Price Cut: Amazon Launches International Version, Lowering Cost Of U.S. Version To $259

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First Posted: 10- 7-09 01:37 AM   |   Updated: 10- 8-09 04:13 PM

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CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP)-Amazon.com Inc. is cutting the price of its Kindle electronic-book reader yet again and launching an international version, in hopes of spurring more sales and keeping it ahead of a growing field of competitors.

With Wednesday's $40 reduction on the Kindle, the device now costs $259. It debuted in 2007 at $399 and started this year at $359, before another price cut in July.

In an interview, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos said the company can now afford to reduce the price because of the increased number of Kindles the company is making -- and selling.

Bezos called it Amazon's best-selling product, but Amazon has not disclosed sales figures for the Kindle, which has a 6-inch screen that displays shades of gray, room to store 1,500 books and the ability to download books wirelessly.

The price reduction also shows Amazon is trying to maintain a lead in the nascent e-reader market as the field gets more crowded.

According to a report being released Wednesday by Forrester Research, e-reader sales will total an estimated 3 million this year, with Amazon selling 60 percent of them and Sony Corp. 35 percent. Sony offers a $199 "Pocket Edition" e-reader and larger $299 touch-screen model, and in December it will offer a $399 model that can wirelessly download books rather than needing a connection to a computer.

Lesser-known companies are moving in, too. IREX Technologies plans to release a wireless-enabled $400 e-reader this fall, and Plastic Logic Ltd. intends to sell one with wireless capabilities as well.

According to the Association of American Publishers, e-books accounted for just 1.6 percent of all book sales in the first half of the year. But the market is growing fast. E-book sales totaled $81.5 million in the first half, up from $29.8 million in the first six months of 2008.

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And Bezos said Amazon sells 48 Kindle copies for every 100 physical copies of books that it offers in both formats. Five months ago it was selling 35 Kindle copies per 100 physical versions.

Bezos said that increase is happening faster than he expected.

"I think that ultimately we will sell more books in Kindle editions than we do in physical editions," Bezos said in the interview, which was held in the Cupertino offices of Lab126, the Amazon subsidiary that developed the Kindle.

In hopes of stimulating even more growth, Amazon also will start selling a $279 version of the Kindle that will work in 100 countries and be sold to readers outside the U.S. This Kindle will begin shipping on Monday in such countries as Australia, Japan, India and Germany.

The current Kindle can wirelessly download content in the U.S. over Sprint Nextel Corp.'s network, but outside the country you must connect it to a computer with a USB cable to add content. The international version will be able to wirelessly download content over AT&T's network around the world.

Seattle-based Amazon also sells a larger version of the Kindle, the DX, which was released this past spring and is geared toward textbook and periodical reading. It costs $489.

Having sub-$299 price tags on the U.S. and international Kindles could help Amazon this holiday season -- a period that the National Retail Federation is expecting to be sluggish. The trade group forecast this week that retail sales in November and December combined will fall 1 percent from last year.

Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps thinks that e-reader prices need to come down even more if the devices are going to become mainstream products, however. She suggested $99 as a price that would be much more likely to lure consumers.

She said people "have somewhat unrealistic expectations of how much consumer electronics in general, and e-readers in particular, should be."

CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP)-Amazon.com Inc. is cutting the price of its Kindle electronic-book reader yet again and launching an international version, in hopes of spurring more sales and keeping it ahead ...
CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP)-Amazon.com Inc. is cutting the price of its Kindle electronic-book reader yet again and launching an international version, in hopes of spurring more sales and keeping it ahead ...
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Sorry for being insufferably lazy, but does anyone know if Kindle with display .PDFs? I think this would wonderful as a storage device for my myriad of technical manuals.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 10/09/2009
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The Kindle should be priced to sell to the masses and only then can they say that they helped improve the reading levels of the people. I will buy one if it was $149.95 for a basic read only machine and if one wanted all the extras then they can upload it for additional cost.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 PM on 10/08/2009
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Originally, I purchased the Kindle 1 and passed it on to my father-in-law (who is quite happy with it BTW) so I could get the Kindle 2. I love my Kindle! I am reading more than I ever did before getting the original Kindle. I finished a book today and tonight I am going to start another one. :-)

I have spent countless hours reading on this thing and I have not had one headache from the e-ink display. The Kindle, although not perfect, is the best e-reader out there IMHO.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:01 PM on 10/08/2009

Far be it for me to dictate what a company should charge for their products, but I do wonder why a hand-held mini-monitor should cost even $259 (after the price cut), when a similarly sized electronic photo frame costs around $70...Having not held a Kindle in my hands, I may be mistaken, but it has to be a slightly embellished form of a picture frame, yes?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 10/07/2009
- NHBill I'm a Fan of NHBill 16 fans permalink
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no

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 10/07/2009
- TazoWolf I'm a Fan of TazoWolf 27 fans permalink
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Well, I know from my dad being part of the design team that the electronic ink display costs $100 alone... and that's at cost. Amazon DOES need to make a profit, you know.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 10/07/2009
- TazoWolf I'm a Fan of TazoWolf 27 fans permalink
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Your photo frames are LCD type. Electronic ink is a completely different technology... it won't give you a headache the way backlit displays will.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:42 PM on 10/07/2009
- Allwx I'm a Fan of Allwx 4 fans permalink
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I don't get a headache from my 4 year old Ipaq handheld, which I primarily use for ebooks, which I buy and download via my desktop at home. It has a smaller screen but this is no impediment except that it doesn't do diagrams and illustrations very well. If I need to look at an illustration I do it on the desktop. Software I use is MobiReader, which is free. The reason I won't buy one of these Amazons is that it is not backlighted. I like to read in dark places, and am old that I need a lot of light. Backlighting is the solution. I need zero ambient light. Light intensity is adjustable within a wide range.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 10/09/2009
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Physical books will never be replaced, ever try reading a novel on a computer or an Iphone hahahahaha!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:07 PM on 10/07/2009

Obviously you've never seen a Kindle. Hahahahaha, indeed. Do some research.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:18 PM on 10/07/2009
- shthar I'm a Fan of shthar 5 fans permalink

And at $259 I probably never will.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:23 PM on 10/08/2009
- Allwx I'm a Fan of Allwx 4 fans permalink
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I read some novels, but mostly historical and biographical works. Handheld ebook device is the perfect way to do it.

However, I find that there are many errors in the ebook version compared to the printed version. They must use OCR devices to convert the text into digital form, and then not proofread the result. It is a minor irritant, but an irritant nonetheless. Many ebooks are as perfect as the print version. About half I've seen have print errors, which amount to spelling and punctuation errors.

It appears the Amazon devices will display illustrations very well, though I have not seen one. For someone needing to read textbooks, manuals, stuff like that, the Amazon or other large screen reader would be the way to go.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:29 PM on 10/09/2009

I agree that Amazon has had a few growing pains with regard to the Kindle, but for someone who reads for several hours a day, trying to read on an iPhone is never going to replace having a book-like device with a decent sized screen to read from. I got my Kindle for Christmas 2008 and would never have bought one for myself...I like "real" books too much! But I'm the biggest fan now! To be able to take my whole library with me, get periodicals cheaper, buy books whenever and wherever I want to...and Amazon has amazing customer service. I love it!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 PM on 10/07/2009
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I like Amazon for physical books, but I won't be blackmailed into having to pay $200 (minimum) so that I can read their $9.99 RENTAL books that they can grab back at any time their little hearts desire, and that you can't share with your friends or pass on to other people by donating to library sales, etc. (In their "apology" for the recent fracas, they said that they wouldn't do it again "in these circumstances" or some such weasel words.) If they want my business, they will have to make their ebooks able to be read on other devices. Until then, I'll go to Barnes & Noble, which has FREE software that you can use on any one of a multitude of different devices.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 PM on 10/07/2009
- metropixie I'm a Fan of metropixie 3 fans permalink
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see you on the barricades!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 10/07/2009
- susangg I'm a Fan of susangg 2 fans permalink

Here's what current technology COULD do right now for us if these companies
would get out of the monopoly mode and think outside the box - A kindle-seized device that includes:
1. A wireless b/g/n card
2. a web browser (so you can go online and browse,email, etc
3. A reader that will read all the popular formats (kindle format/epub/pdf digital/e-reader,
4. A telephone feature, where you can use a headphone and your favorite free or
low cost VOIP vendor (skype, magic jack, vonage, etc.) to make and receive phone
calls.
5. An end-user-accessible port where you can stick a GSM chip from whoever provides cell service where you happen to be & buy prepaid time.
6. A net-based TV service where you can purchase any show anywhere for a low fee (assuming your wireless connected is fast and robust.)
7. A DVD player.
The e-bookstores would compete for your business the old fashioned way: Who has
the most books, who has the best price,. They would license their products to all the various reader formats. Amazon would clearly come out the biggest player in the game because they have most books, but other companies could compete too if they wished. The problem isn't technology, its old fashioned thinking, both on the part of the ebook vendors and the old fashioned publishing industry which have their heads firmly planted in the last century.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 10/07/2009
- iblogleft I'm a Fan of iblogleft 87 fans permalink
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Well said.

This kindle is joke at any price, to anyone that knows technology.

This is not just "inside the box mentality", its in the absolute center of the box, inside bubble wrap.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 10/07/2009
- NHBill I'm a Fan of NHBill 16 fans permalink
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Remember the kindle has a black and white screen that mimics paper and uses very little battery. Until they make a color screen with these characteristics most of your added features would detract from the core mission. Finally DVD? Who still uses DVD?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 PM on 10/07/2009
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I believe you really just want a laptop? Wait for the new Apple device will have all you listed except DVD Player thats so 2000's.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:06 PM on 10/07/2009
- TazoWolf I'm a Fan of TazoWolf 27 fans permalink
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Kindle has wireless, and it has a web browser. I've checked email with my kindle. Kindle DOES read the popular formats, and those it doesn't, you can easily convert... FREE.

I've got over 100 free books I've done this with on my Kindle (PDF, txt, doc, jpg, html, etc), PLUS speeches where I've used my Kindle as a portable teleprompter.

Electronic ink technology is designed for READING, not chatting with other people. The Kindle CAN read to you, though, and it can play your mp3's too.

Good luck getting FREE wireless internet with your GSM chips.

A DVD player? Now you're just getting ridiculous!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:46 PM on 10/07/2009

waiting to see what the Apple tablet has in store for ebooks.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 PM on 10/07/2009
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You can already read ebooks on your iphone.. Before you spend the extra money on the shiny apple tablet check out the crunchpad, it might have what you're looking for at half the price :)

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 10/07/2009
- metropixie I'm a Fan of metropixie 3 fans permalink
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I'm reading books on the iPhone via Amazon's Kindle app and love it that I don't have to carry books or another device.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 10/07/2009
- NHBill I'm a Fan of NHBill 16 fans permalink
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Or you could wait a few months and see if Apple revolutionizes yet another consumer electronics category!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 10/07/2009
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The big question (waiting for the other foot to drop) is going to be the CrunchPad -- finally apparently serious enough for Apple to re-energize it's "super-iPod" approach and for Microsoft to shove their "open leaf" split tablet approach into view. For me, a CrunchPad (non-Apple, non-MS) is a no-brainer for a couch market (wireless have at your fingers while in "non-work" mode as an information resource. I'm not sure that any price point above that (which the Apple and MS entries would likely be) is going to soar at this time. (The MS demo is very robust, but speaks to a market of lawyers and other meeting-attenders, not the home market as the iPad would likely be pitched to.) Anyway, that's my $0.02.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 10/07/2009
- Allwx I'm a Fan of Allwx 4 fans permalink
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I am so happy to see ebooks take off. I've been carrying my Ipaq around in my back pocket for 4 years using it to read ebooks during the day when I have time. No one else I know seems very interested in it, most have never heard of ebooks. People are always asking me, what am I doing, when I read in waiting rooms, or other places where I have a few minutes for reading. It seems like just such a perfect solution in so many ways, to the problem of carrying around a pile of books. The Ipaq fits perfectly in my back jeans pocket, battery lasts for about a week, charges in a couple hours. Very rugged device. My wife's got dropped out of a motorcycle saddlebag at 70mph and then sat out on a highway in temps around 110f between Big Bend Park and Fort Stockton, in May. An oil drilling crew saw it and picked it up, name was on it, and we reconnected with it. Though it is scratched up from the tumble, it still works perfectly.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:39 PM on 10/09/2009
- LMKay66 I'm a Fan of LMKay66 47 fans permalink
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Not much of a price cute. I paid $300 for mine. And with all the newer cell phones (iPhone) coming out with book-downl­oading-rea­ding capability, I'm not sure how much longer these things will sell. Same thing with GPS TomTom's and the like. Now you can get GPS on iPhone too I hear.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:21 PM on 10/07/2009
- NHBill I'm a Fan of NHBill 16 fans permalink
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The dedicated gps devices do the job much better and you can just leave it in the car. For $150 I'll get a real gps.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 10/07/2009
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Trust this from a Kindle owner... Reading a book on the Kindle for iPhone app is NOTHING like reading it on a Kindle 2.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:04 PM on 10/08/2009

I can definitely see the attraction, but new to the technology I am curious about a few details. If your kindle is lost or stolen, do you lose your whole library in one fell swoop? Does amazon keep a record of your sales so you can re-download for free or at a nominal cost? Is there a backup system available for your e-library?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 PM on 10/07/2009
- LMKay66 I'm a Fan of LMKay66 47 fans permalink
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It's all backed up at amazon.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 PM on 10/07/2009
- Dale Larson I'm a Fan of Dale Larson 207 fans permalink
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"It's all backed up at amazon."

To an almost scary fashion. When Amazon Unilaterally deleted the Orwell's book from many people's Kindle's it really surprised those folks at the reach of Amazon's Ebook system. When Amazon ultimately reinstated the books, even people's personal bookmarks and notes were restored!

Don't put any sensitive data on a Kindle!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 PM on 10/07/2009
- TXfemmom I'm a Fan of TXfemmom 186 fans permalink

Well, when it hits $199 I may try the thing.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 PM on 10/07/2009

I prefer real books for most things, but I can readily see wanting a Kindle when traveling; when my wife and I go off on a 2-week trip we need to take at least a dozen fat PBs along, and it would be great to save that much weight - but we'd need two Kindles for it to really help, so the price has to come down at least another $60, preferably more, before we'll make the investment.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:39 AM on 10/07/2009
- siegfried I'm a Fan of siegfried 9 fans permalink

I have a Kindle. I am currently reading "War and Peace". For Russian novels a Kindle is definatly better than a book. With the reduced price of a Kindle book I think I will recover my investment in about fifty books.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:43 PM on 10/07/2009
- Gudrun I'm a Fan of Gudrun 6 fans permalink

Is it easy to find the footnotes while reading on Kindle, if they are at the end of the book?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 10/07/2009

I've downloaded books while sitting in the car after finishing the book I was currently reading. I also feel a sense of satisfaction by sending the book to archive and not having to putting it on a bookshelf.

Two other perks of the Kindle: You can make any book larger print and the Kindle fits in the tray for the treadmill or exercise bike and makes reading while exercising simple.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 PM on 10/07/2009
- metropixie I'm a Fan of metropixie 3 fans permalink
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Same is true for the iPhone Kindle app...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 10/07/2009

I love my Kindle. I live in a small town with one small bookstore. Most of the books I want to read I have to order, with the Kindle I can download almost any book I want in under a minute and start reading. Plus, I don't/won't have a pile of books on the floor, tables, etc. because my bookshelves are already full.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 10/07/2009
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You know what's better than buying a Kindle? Buying a book.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 AM on 10/07/2009
- mamala4 I'm a Fan of mamala4 52 fans permalink
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I couldn't agree with you more....I love having books on my shelves, loaning books to friends and family....my grandparents owned a bookstore in Brooklyn in the 40's and 50's and grew up with thusands of books in our home....I still have some of those books today...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 AM on 10/07/2009
- redhead61 I'm a Fan of redhead61 63 fans permalink
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I'm right there with you too! How could the Kindle ever replace the wonderful leather bound classics or even the enjoyment of a tattered paperback favorite. I'd be too worried about breaking the darned thing. Too expensive! Not to mention...cannot be passed from friend to friend, or the savings one gets for buying books on clearance, books at sales etc.

I cannot imagine the investment one would have to make to pay 9.99 per book (at least) to replace a collection. I'm sure there is a wonderful convenience to buying instantly a new best seller..but my favorite books are NOT always on the best seller list....and they are often ones I'd like to pass along to others and share the joy of reading.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 PM on 10/07/2009
- WSAY I'm a Fan of WSAY 28 fans permalink
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You think that because you haven't purchased the Kindle. Kindle is superior. Many things are great about it. Books are cheaper, and it remembers where you left off. You can search on it, bookmark it, and insert notes. It is lighter and holds many books. Best of all, and you don't appreciate this until you use it, you can get "Samples" of nearly every book out there. This is usually the first couple of chapters. I find it great to begin reading and see if I like the book. If so - I purchase it (and I purchase it cheaper than if I bought it in book format.) The people who resist this are the same people who believed computers were not needed because we had typewriters. Be a Dinosaur for as long as you like, but all that will do is put you behind the curve when you finally give in.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 10/07/2009
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I can do pretty much all those things on B&N, though they just started so they don't have as wide a selection, but THEY'RE not demanding $200-300 from me just so I can READ one of those "cheap" books.

However, if I like the book I CAN'T lend it to a friend or donate it to a library sale so that other people can get the same pleasure out of it that I can. Ebooks have their good points, but they still have a lot of disadvantages.

Oh, and if someday we go back to a new dark age, your Kindle won't even be any good for kindling a fire, while my books will still be readable.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 10/07/2009
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Do you really believe there was a movement of people saying "DOWN WITH COMPUTERS, WE HAVE TYPEWRITERS!!"?

I mean, I'm not AGAINST the Kindle. I just think it's ridiculous. You pay $300 for a tiny little piece of equipment that you cannot drop, cannot leave out and cannot do anything that you'd normally do with a book that cost you 7 bucks. Because if you do, it'll break, it'll get stolen or something else will happen that results in you having to shell out ANOTHER $300 dollars because you wanted to have an electronic highlighter.

No thank you.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 10/07/2009
- metropixie I'm a Fan of metropixie 3 fans permalink
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Obviously, the Kindle is NOT for people who prefer real books...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 10/07/2009
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Unfortunately, some of us have NO more room for physical books. This is why I love the Kindle.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:53 PM on 10/08/2009
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Dude, this is not a reason to throw down 300+ bucks on a piece of equipment. Just donate some of your books to charity. There's no reason to hang on to everything you've ever read.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:16 AM on 10/09/2009
- rtwyatt6 I'm a Fan of rtwyatt6 37 fans permalink
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I want an e reader so bad. I think I will go with the Sony one because with it you can check out books at participating libraries. Can't beat that. If anybody has a Sony I'd love to hear your feedback on it.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 AM on 10/07/2009
- Gudrun I'm a Fan of Gudrun 6 fans permalink

I have the Kindle DX and like it very much, but I've heard good things about the Sony too.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 10/07/2009
- TazoWolf I'm a Fan of TazoWolf 27 fans permalink
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You can convert free books for the Kindle.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:48 PM on 10/07/2009
- rtwyatt6 I'm a Fan of rtwyatt6 37 fans permalink
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You can with the Sony too, from what I've read about it.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 AM on 10/08/2009
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