Okay, not to add to the Kindle debate... er... but I guess I'm going to add
to it:
Amazon just released Kindle for iPhone. Essentially it's a free program for
the iPhone that lets you read Kindle books. So I've checked it out.

*Pros*: Even the obscure books I found on Amazon had Kindle versions. I
found Jefferson's Bible, which I couldn't find at eReader or Fictionwise
(the two ebook stores I use on the iPhone).

The iPhone application syncs with your Kindle, if you have one. That means
if you read your Kindle in bed, but then the next day find yourself early
for a meeting, you can pick up your iPhone and start reading right where you
left off on the Kindle.

You can also download the first chapter of (I guess any) book for free. If
you like it, you can buy the book.

I've heard the Kindle's pages turn frustratingly slowly. The iPhone Kindle
turns immediately.

*Cons*: You have to synchronize everything, which means if you're somewhere
without cellular reception, you miss out on some features.

The interface is rather plain and ugly.

To buy a book, you have to go to the Amazon web site, rather than browse
within the program like eReader lets you do.

The Jefferson Bible is in the public domain, and so exists in full on Google
Books. I can even download it and put it into eReader for free, rather than
pay $10 to Amazon.


I don't know how much I'll use it over eReader, but it might happen. But I
think there is one thing that will have a much bigger impact on authors and
book sales in the long run - the free chapters. I will probably use this
feature before I buy a book every time now. I no longer have to rely on what
reviewers or the book jacket say. If I could read the first chapter of Dan
Simmons' Ilium, I would have learned that I should not have wasted twenty
cents on the rest of the book. If we do move more toward ebooks, that free
chapter is going to change the sales of books, making truly good books sell
(a little) better, and truly awful books sell (a little) worse.

And as for authors: We already know how important that first chapter can be,
but now that first chapter can mean the difference between a sale and no
sale. If this is the way of ebooks, that first chapter is going to have to
become a marketing pitch for the whole book.


--
Jonathan Sherwood
Sr. Science & Technology Press Officer
University of Rochester
585-273-4726

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