Reading
In the main, this isn't a post about the iPad, although there's a bunch of relevance there, and the conclusion mostly is about the iPad.
I've been experimenting with different reading form factors for digital books over the last few weeks -- I've of course had my various Kindles (Kindlii?) for a couple of years now, and have basically come to love them. I've read maybe a hundred books, at least a couple of over a thousand pages, and would not trade it. It is decidedly not a perfect device, and is...what's the word?...oh, right: ugly. But it gets a lot right for the way that I use it.
But I've also been experimenting with reading on my iPhone (via the Kindle app) and on my laptop (again, via the Kindle app) -- and I've written about some of my early experience in that mode. And when I say "experimenting," what I mean is that I've been reading whole, long form books on it. When I went to Austin a couple of weeks ago, I intentionally didn't bring my Kindle, preferring to try traveling without it.
And I've been trying to read longer chapters and parts of books on my laptop, through the Kindle application for Windows.
So the first conclusion is one that I've made before: it's having your book content in the cloud that really makes the big difference. Being able to read your books on any screen that you happen to have with you is the thing that matters.
But beyond that, I'm finding that I'm a more capable and thoughtful reader when I use the Kindle, as opposed to the other devices. It's a little hard to explain, but I can maintain a certain stillness and focus when I'm using the Kindle that I haven't been able to achieve when reading on the iPhone or laptop -- I find that on those 2 devices, I'm a little fidgety, and my mind tends to wander towards all the other things I can do on them. My retention isn't as good as it is when I'm reading on the Kindle itself, and my attention span isn't as long.
I think there are a few factors here:
- The backlit LED screens just really are not as good for your eyes for reading text. There's a dynamism to the letters from the lighting, I think, that makes it a little harder for me to focus on the letterforms. And I have this feeling that my eyes get fatigued much more quickly with backlit screens.
- For the iPhone, the screen is just too small to read books without feeling like they have a million pages. So every book feels super long. It's sort of like reading e-mail on your phone -- you always find yourself thinking "holy cow, this is a long note" and then when you look at it on your laptop, you discover it was only a couple of lines.
- For both the iPhone and laptop, I think I have different mental associations about what I do with them -- so I found myself switching back and forth between apps quite a lot -- which of course took me out of the flow of the book.
- The laptop sucks in all sorts of ways for long form reading. There's a keyboard between me & the screen, for example. The pixel density isn't all that great. Just to name a couple.
- The screen on my Kindle is clean. I am pretty fanatical about keeping my Kindle screen free of gunk -- I really don't touch it at all, and am careful about wiping it off when I need to. I'm also a little neurotic (shocking, I know), about keeping my phone (whether iPhone or Nexus One) clean, but there's always a layer of grime on there, just because I manipulate the UI with my fingers constantly. [New learning: this is doubly gross when you're home sick. Gah.] Even with the extremely cool oleophobic screens that Apple has created, my iPhone is just grimy.
- The last thing is the battery life -- I usually don't leave the wireless on for my Kindle, which results in something like 3 weeks of actual use in battery life. I just don't ever worry about whether it'll run out or not. With the iPhone, I can't usually get more than about 13 hours -- so when I fly, I'm jealous about how I use it, and I've got battery meters running in my head regarding how to keep it charged.
- It's good to have more readers in the market -- I think that will help everyone.
- I'm very glad they chose a relatively standard format -- ePub -- that's a great thing, even though it includes DRM. But I trust the DRM will go away over time.
- Having said that, the extent of a book catalog shows itself very quickly. There's a huge difference, for real readers, between catalogs that have the bestsellers and more comprehensive ones. The Amazon Kindle catalog is quite comprehensive at this point -- I only run into about 1 in every 5 books that I want that I can't get.
- Pretty disappointed in the connectors on the iPad -- am really tired of the iPhone connector, and wish they would move to micro USB like everyone else on the planet.
- I can't figure out why the early hands-on reviewers thought the virtual keyboard was going to feel great -- totally flat keyboards have never felt great. That may not matter, but I thought it was a weird expectation.