No, there are two different things here. Kindle with accessibility plug in is 
free software for your pc. Then there is the hardware device called Kindle 
Keyboard. It use to be just Kindle, but since they came out with the Fire and 
the other recent offerings, now they call this old one Kindle Keyboard, 
presumably because it has a physical keyboard. This is really off topic for 
this list to discuss the details of accessibility of non-Mac items. I will just 
say that both the accessible plug in application and the hardware device do 
keep your place in a book, so you can close the book and come back to it and 
pick up where you left off. The advantage of the pc app is that you can access 
even books whose publishers didn't allow text to speech to be enabled on the 
Kindle hardware devices. And it's free. So the best advice would be to install 
the free app with plug in which you get from the amazon.com site, check out the 
help guide, also found on amazon.com and try it out with a free book from the 
kindle store. You can move around to different pages in the pc application. You 
can not do so on the hardware device when the text to speech for reading a book 
is enabled. Google accessible kindle and you will find more in depth discussion 
of what it can and can't do.

Mary

Mary Otten
[email protected]


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