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Next Kindle Expected To Have a Front-Lit Display

An anonymous reader writes "Amazon doesn't show off prototypes unless it is pretty confident about the tech, so you may be surprised to find the next Kindle is probably going to have a front-lit display. The lighting tech comes from a company they purchased back in 2010 called Oy Modilis. It specialized in such lighting and has patents related to whatever Amazon decided to use. The display is meant to be lit in a blue-white glow, and if it's anything like Flex lighting probably won't impact battery life too much. The question is, does anyone really want or need a light for their Kindle?"

132 comments

  1. Not a huge concern by neokushan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The kindle works very much like how a book does - you can read it in the same conditions, with the benefit of a consistent size, portability and of course the ability to carry many "books" with you at the same time. There's a plethora of itty-bitty book lights and similar reading aids out there that work just as well for the kindle as any book. You can also get cases with lights built into them specifically designed for the kindle. This is a welcome addition, but seems more evolutionary than revolutionary.

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    1. Re:Not a huge concern by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      I feel the same way. All the years I spent reading paper books, I never once thought "if only this thing had a built-in light." I also never desired to read my mail, watch television, or listen to the radio with a book. I think that people who read are more concerned with a user experience that enhances reading, and I have found that a lamp next to my bed has been the best innovation yet when it comes to reading at night.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    2. Re:Not a huge concern by ccguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All the years I spent reading paper books, I never once thought "if only this thing had a built-in light."

      Well, just marry someone how wants to sleep while you read in bed.

    3. Re:Not a huge concern by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All the years I spent reading paper books, I never once thought "if only this thing had a built-in light."

      As an avid reader from a very young age, with parents that would say "Lights out, Giacomino, you got school tomorrow!", a light was one of the first things I thought should be built into all books.

      And comics! And later, glossy magazines with women in various levels of undress that my friend in the 6th grade stole from the back of his dad's bottom drawer (but here's the killer...) that I was later to learn also had short stories (!) by Nabokov, Henry Miller and Philip Roth. That may have been what really set me on a life of literature: the close association between naked ladies and very sophisticated writing. It's why after all these years, even though he is very creepy, if I were to see Hugh Hefner on the street, I would personally thank him.

      Yes, lights built into all books, stat.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    4. Re:Not a huge concern by itsdapead · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I feel the same way. All the years I spent reading paper books, I never once thought "if only this thing had a built-in light."

      If you google for "clip-on book light" you'll get enough hits to suggest that there is a demand for a way to illuminate a book in the dark without turning on the bedside lamp, and I guess Amazon sold a lot of those covers with the built-in light. Of course, building one into a book isn't sensible, because you'd need one built into every book. With an ebook reader, it makes sense. In other news, you probably never thought "if only this book had built-in WiFi, 3G, speakers, a headphone jack and a micro-USB socket" but I'd wager that at least one of those is on your "must-have" list for an e-reader.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    5. Re:Not a huge concern by zippthorne · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Eh, if it doesn't impact the battery life much, or substantially change the device dimensions, then I don't see the harm. I know I'm tired of people pointing out my e-reader is not a tablet and thinking they're getting some kind of dig in by asking if I can read in the dark. If you see me reading it, and ask about it, and I tell you I love it, you're not clever for pointing out that I could play bejeweled if I'd bought an iPad.

      A light is not enough to overcome the format issues, and general Amazon scumminess to get me to switch from my ePub native e-reader, though...

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    6. Re:Not a huge concern by fooslacker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I actually think it's a bigger deal than that because of the changes in the way we read and the context of what is possible now versus when paper books were the only medium to communicate the written word. While I agree with your basic analysis regarding traditional books I think the difference is the iPad and other tablets (note I'm ignoring the Fire because I see that as a poor compromise between an iPad and a Kindle non-Fire)

      Before these devices the Kindle was the undisputed king of readers and all it had to do was replicate the book experience as closely as possible and I was thrilled. With the iPad I now actually read more on my iPad than my Kindle because the interface is better (Kindle is addressing this with various touch technologies but I don't yet have an eInk touch version) and I can read in the dark at the end of the day. However, the reading experience on the iPad leaves a bit to be desired in any overhead lighting environment because of glare (I haven't tried the new one as I'm still on iPad2). As a result I used to be completely happy with my Kindle but now I have two devices that I'm probably 70% happy with because the context of what is possible/available has changed.

      As you said book lights can solve the problem but it's just another complication to the process that needs batteries and to be attached and to be stored and generally adds to the inconvenience. This wasn't an issue with books because there wasn't an alternative but since the context has changed and I now know it's an extra hassle it becomes annoying.

      I think these technologically evolutionary improvements are exactly what has a chance to create revolutionary functional change (not that this one necessarily will if it is poorly executed) and win Amazon back some market share. As a result I love when companies focus on experiential design facets of a product rather than just cramming the latest chip in something and adding features to add features regardless of how well executed the feature may be.

    7. Re:Not a huge concern by neonKow · · Score: 1, Funny

      Just don't use a freaking searchlight to read and a small lamp should be just fine.

    8. Re:Not a huge concern by fafaforza · · Score: 5, Informative

      I don't understand the resistance to something like this. What if you're on an overnight flight and don't want to use the overhead light because everyone else is asleep. What if your subway lights go out (as they sometimes do in NYC).

      What will eInk people complain about next, electric light bulbs? Kerosene lamps were fine, and your horse drawn carriage got 12 paces to a fart and no one complained?

    9. Re:Not a huge concern by clodney · · Score: 1

      You can also get cases with lights built into them specifically designed for the kindle. This is a welcome addition, but seems more evolutionary than revolutionary.

      I agree that this is more evolutionary than revolutionary, but I would snap one of these up in a heartbeat. I already have the reading light case for my Kindle, and while it is nice, it means that the device has to be in its case to be of use. Having one built in to the display surface seems like a big step up, assuming that it has no more power drain than the existing external lights, and has an on/off switch.

      As someone who has aging eyes and a preference for overall low light levels at home at night, a lit Kindle would be very welcome.

    10. Re:Not a huge concern by moortak · · Score: 1

      I often read while walking to work. For about half o the year there is plenty of light. The other half I would appreciate a built in light.

      --
      Xavier Rabourdin for president 2012
    11. Re:Not a huge concern by hawguy · · Score: 2

      I use a small clip on light on my Kindle, but there's still significant spillover to the wall when I'm laying down with the Kindle - my partner gets to watch the shadow of my kindle playing on the wall or ceiling while she tries to sleep. That's with the light on "low" setting, *and* a small piece of kleenex taped to the light head to diffuse and reduce it - the stock light is even brighter with more spilover. When I roll over to my side, the light slides so I need to re-position it, which takes some doing to keep from seeing a hotspot of glare from the light on the screen.

      It would be so much nicer if the light was built-in and was always positioned perfectly with no glare and no excess light shining on the wall.

      I just hope it's dimmable nearly all the way to zero - neither my Android phone nor my Nook dim far enough for me in a pitch-dark room.

    12. Re:Not a huge concern by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      All the years I spent reading paper books, I never once thought "if only this thing had a built-in light."

      You can buy them for paper books too. I have one which clips onto the top of a book and lights the current page.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    13. Re:Not a huge concern by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      You're too late. Most laptops have backlights. Kids these days aren't stealing porn from their dad's drawers, they're downloading gigabytes of the stuff to their computer and putting them in TrueCrypt partitions.

      Good writing, not so much.

      --
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    14. Re:Not a huge concern by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      I often read while walking to work. For about half o the year there is plenty of light. The other half I would appreciate a built in light.

      I just thought you were drunk.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    15. Re:Not a huge concern by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nook simple touch eink reader is rumoured coming out with about same built in light system. http://blog.the-ebook-reader.com/2012/04/02/new-nook-touch-to-have-led-flex-lighting-for-night-reading/

    16. Re:Not a huge concern by Omestes · · Score: 0

      If you think an iPad is better for reading than eInk, your missing the point of eInk. This isn't to see that your preferences are wrong, you like what you like, but you miss why people like me prefer eInk.

      I have a Transformer, and a Nook Touch (and a first gen Nook 3g), I never read anything more than webpages and comic books on my tablet. I read anything dealing with large amounts of static text on the Nook. Why? I hate backlights (or front lights, or glowing screens in general). It hurts my eyes at night, it keeps me from sleeping when I should, and they generally give me severe eye strain. I might be special, since when I read I generally sit down for over a two hour clip, and when I use a glowy screen I take breaks every 15 minutes to half hour.

      For me, a tablet is a small portable computer, and an ebook is a small portable dead tree book. I don't want or expect to much crossover. My ebook not being tablety enough is a good thing. If they could make my tablet more ebooky (matte screen, high contrast, no backlight, massive battery life) I'd be as happy as a clam, though.

      Fun fact: I've thrown away more book lights than Amazon has probably sold Kindles. Every damn year for 20+ years everyone figures that since I'm a reader I need a damn booklight. I still dont' think I've ever actually used one (I lie, one had a nice clip, and I used to clip it to PC cases while I was working on them). I have a nice lamp. When my girlfriend is sleeping I read in our library room, or my office (both with good lamps and comfy chairs). I haven't actually found myself stranding in the wilderness without any source of light, and an odd hankering for Stephen King, if I had no light source I'd probably be more worried about that.

      It, in the end, I suppose is a case of different strokes for different folks, though.

      --
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    17. Re:Not a huge concern by Mista2 · · Score: 1

      Nice to have these features, but what I really want is to be able to read my epubs on a kindle, the I might buy one. For now I'll keep using my tablet and phone so I can run any reader I want.

    18. Re:Not a huge concern by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      I bought a light for my first Kindle, the DX, then my second Kindle is the Kindle 3, which I have the Amazon cover for. For both I prefer to use the lamp next to my bed to the light on the Kindle. The lamp doesn't create any irritating 'hot spots' and I can read at more angles and rest the Kindle in more places without the appendage, plus I find warm incandescent light more comfortable than the harsh LED light. If I were the luddite you are accusing me to be, I wouldn't own a Kindle. Some features are clearly superior, particularly the ability to store huge amounts of books in one compact device. As far as music, I actually prefer to read with no music, however, when there is significant background noise, such as on a plane, I use my phone, which has all of my music and streaming radio stations on it.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    19. Re:Not a huge concern by fooslacker · · Score: 2

      Not sure you read my post correctly. I get that you don't want a light but your preference is not particularly relevant to my point unless of course there are so many people like you out there that the feature doesn't help sell new Kindles.

      I prefer eInk too and yet I read more on my iPad currently primarily because I read at night before I go to sleep and since I read on my iPad most of the time, I rarely take the time to go find my Kindle for the times when I'm not reading in conditions where I need a light. I don't particularly like the ipad as a reader and actually prefer the eInk screen, weight, and battery life of my Kindle. The two areas where it sucks are the interface which is a pain when managing thousands of titles and the lack of ability to read in a dark environment. I don't want a screen that glows all the time but I would like a light I can turn on and off that makes it readable in a dark environment that doesn't tether me to a lamp and hence lying or sitting in one position for hours at a time.

      My point was to say that these types of features can't be dismissed because a book doesn't have them as I believe that ereaders have changed what the experience of reading means in many cases and in that context and as a development strategy it is important for Kindles to compete with functional use cases (e.g. reading at night) and feature sets (e.g. good UI for managing large numbers of books) that other reading devices support, so that they can then win on things that differentiate them like eInk, battery, and price.

    20. Re:Not a huge concern by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IMO: a kindle is much harder to read in dim light than a regular paper book. The contrast in a book tends to be higher.

    21. Re:Not a huge concern by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So...you did think "if only this thing had a light built in" so you bought an aftermarket attachment, but then didn't like it.

    22. Re:Not a huge concern by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love my kindle 3, and I love the light built into the case. I use the light more than 50% of the time I spend reading on the Kindle... The device would be substantially less useful to me without it.

      Building the light INTO the kindle, allowing me to read with the light without having to always be attached to the case? Do want. It sounds like this may also improve energy efficiency by wasting less light, and therefore less power.

    23. Re:Not a huge concern by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      My first Playboy experience: wasn't my mag, a friend had obtained from his father (not sure if father knew), and sure there were nekkid ladies in there but the only thing I recall? The comic, which had a lady holding a small black box near her crotch, the guy standing holding a phone, and the caption was her saying "Page me again!!!!" (Yes, it was from before cell phones.)

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    24. Re:Not a huge concern by locopuyo · · Score: 1

      You know they have really nice free programs for managing and converting all formats of e-books and uploading them to your e-reader of choice. Calibre is a nice one. I use it with my nook simple touch, which I prefer over the kindle touch.

    25. Re:Not a huge concern by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      You can buy them for paper books too. I have one which clips onto the top of a book and lights the current page.

      And everybody I know who uses a Kindle has some variation on that in use.

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    26. Re:Not a huge concern by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      The comic, which had a lady holding a small black box near her crotch, the guy standing holding a phone, and the caption was her saying "Page me again!!!!"

      Pagers? My first Playboy experience was closer to the first Moon landing than the first cell phone.

      Alleged moon landing, that is.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    27. Re:Not a huge concern by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Third-party clip-on lights are kinda meh - I tried several until I finally figured I might as well just drop the cash on Amazon's cover with integrated light... and it actually works very nice - somehow the angle "just works". This isn't to say that it achieves perfectly even lighting, but it does not have any obvious hotspots - it's a smooth gradient, and all corners are bright enough to be readable.

    28. Re:Not a huge concern by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Before these devices the Kindle was the undisputed king of readers and all it had to do was replicate the book experience as closely as possible and I was thrilled. With the iPad I now actually read more on my iPad than my Kindle because the interface is better (Kindle is addressing this with various touch technologies but I don't yet have an eInk touch version)

      I don't see why touch interface would be any better for actual reading. Stuff like highlighting text, search, shopping etc - yeah, sure, I can see that. But flipping pages? Give me hardware buttons for that any day. That way I can hold the reader in one hand while resting the finger on the "next page" button, and just slightly increase the pressure on it to flip. On iPad (and Kindle Touch), you either need to do the swipe - which means using two hands - or you need to tap the margin, which still requires some finger gymnastics (esp. on iPad, which is so damn heavy compared to Kindle).

      Anyway, if you want to see the reader with perfect ergonomics in that particular department, that's Sony PRS-505. Putting those page flip buttons in the corner was a stroke of pure genius - since it's much more convenient to hold the thing by gripping it at the corner, rather than at the side as you have to with Kindle.

    29. Re:Not a huge concern by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      Well that's not really what I was referring to, but to respond to your point...

      1. I specifically mean the interface for managing hundreds or thousands of books not so much for flipping pages

      2. That said, I actually hate the kindle buttons. I hit them all the time on accident and the forward and back layout isn't intuitive to me so I regularly go the wrong direction. That doesn't mean touch is better for flipping just that the kindle button layout sucks, IMO.

      3. I agree the iPad is too heavy, however I regularly read with one hand and use my thumb to tap the page on the side which sends it forward in the Kindle reader software. Also I sometimes read laying down with the iPad resting on a horizontal surface (largely due to the weight of the thing)

      All of that said, my point was that neither of the devices is really what I want even though I used to love the Kindle. This is due to a change in the context of what is expected from a reader and is a result of more devices with differing features. Finally, I believe that by borrowing some of the better features from the tablet world, Kindle has a chance to become the dominant reader once again.

    30. Re:Not a huge concern by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      I bought the aftermarket attachment because they offered it. I look at a book and I think, "what discoveries await?"

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    31. Re:Not a huge concern by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      However, if you like to read while laying on your right side, then you end up bending the light.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    32. Re:Not a huge concern by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Actually, I do love reading while laying on my right side (using the cover to support the book), and it works great there, too.

    33. Re:Not a huge concern by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      I actually use my (also Apple) phone for reading more than my iPad, because the pixel density is higher (or was -- not sure about the 3rd generation iPad), it's lighter, its backlight is less bright and has less shine-through, and obviously it fits the hand better. And with the complete waste of space that are the 1" margins on the iPad Kindle app, I can fit just as many or nearly as many words on the iPhone screen. It also has the advantage that I carry it with me by default. I entirely expected the iPad to fill the reader role for me, but it has, as I feared, been relegated to keeping my nightstand dust-free in its footprint.

      At any rate, the biggest reason I see the phone or tablet winning out over the dedicated reader is the same as the smart phone over the dedicated music player, or dedicated phone, or dedicated PDA: convergence. People want and expect their portable device to fill multiple roles, and dedicated readers, by definition, just don't do that. Amazon saw the writing on the wall and released the Fire, and I expect we'll continue to see more of a focus on multipurpose and less on dedicated e-readers.

    34. Re:Not a huge concern by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Heh, yep, we're all old in different ways. :)

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    35. Re:Not a huge concern by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. I read regularly on my phone as well, primarily due to the mobility and convergence issue. I do not choose to read on it however if other devices are available due to the small screen. That said I think there will continue to be a phone reading use case because of the points you mention.

    36. Re:Not a huge concern by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Heh, yep, we're all old in different ways. :)

      Ain't that the truth..

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    37. Re:Not a huge concern by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Kindle, like all the iDevices, succeeded because of marketing. Those who claim that it was the brilliant design (think of the Edsel, oh yeah, you're too young, google it) or the amazing features (just do a real compare) or the "intuitive interface" (no more or less than any other interface) are missing the simple and salient fact that these devices succeeded because of a truly innovative and powerful marketing campaign that convinced people of the above "reasons" for why they wanted their new toy.

      Sony turned out a damn good eReader (i still have 1) that was far ahead of Amazon. People stayed away in droves because Sony didn't know how to (find their ass with both hands???) put together a real marketable package that included books, magazines, newspapers and a simple usable market that allowed easy transfer from device to device. Not too surprisingly, Sony felt they had to lock everything down tight and control every part of the package, including the content and succeeded only in making it hard to use.

      We all know that tablet tech had been sitting around for years waiting for somebody to figure out how to market it. Jobs, brilliantly, recognized that the tablet was more like a big phone than a laptop or netbook. He marketed it that way, but actually missed its real market (the users and devs saved Apple on this) -- as a different form factor for a handheld game device. I don't really think that they have caught on to this entirely, but they don't think they need to cause they are selling enough as is. In any event, I see it being used more as a physics game machine than anything else.

  2. Most people want a light for their Kindle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I read in bed most nights... not very practical without a light. I have the case with a built-in light. Yes I could use a tablet but e-ink is the way to go for long fiction books. Plus the Kindle is the best investment in history if all you want to do is read, you can leave wi-fi off if you have DRM psychological problems and the battery lasts for weeks and load it up with classics from project gutenberg. That's why nobody cares about rooting their e-ink kindle, it only does one thing well but does it perfectly.

    1. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use a clip-on booklight if I want to read in bed when my partner is asleep. I prefer it to using the overhead lights on planes and buses too. It works fine but a front-lit kindle would be more convenient - less to carry, no batteries to replace - and presumably would provide more even illumination. I don't want one enough to replace my existing kindle though.

    2. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by arkhan_jg · · Score: 2

      Much as I loved my kindle 3 (with surplus keyboard), I've since switched to the kobo touch after a problem with the kindle screen out of warranty - it's gone all 'ghosty'. Same idea as the kindle touch, except that _still_ isn't available in the UK yet; they wouldn't even ship a US version to the UK. It's up for pre-order now, finally, at £109 - or the kobo touch is available now from a ton of places, has been since xmas, and is only £80 (or the non-touch version for £49 @ asda, vs £89 for the kindle basic). Plus it reads epubs (drm-free or adobe digital editions), so you can buy books from all sorts of places that may be cheaper without having to sod about with calibre conversion, you don't have to use the kobo store.

      While amazon after sales support is admittedly 2nd to none, they're not automatically the best value for e-ink readers any more. I do agree that e-ink is the way to go for reading books though. Small, light, portable, cheap, and a battery life measured in weeks not hours, as well as a well-stocked library in something smaller and lighter than one paperback. I'm saving so much weight in my luggage alone it's been worth it!

      I did have a separate light for the kindle - it fitted into the leather case - and it did prove handy on the odd occasion when travelling and didn't have a decent light to read by - planes, trains and hotels especially. I would use it in bed at night, but my wife happily falls asleep with her own light on, let alone my bedside one. I can see how a built in light would be useful if your partner was more sensitive to bed-side lights, as a strap on light does add weight and alter the balance quite a bit. I haven't had the need to light up my kobo yet, but will probably just duct tape my current bendy one to it if needed!

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    3. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by Threni · · Score: 1

      The touch is released in the UK in a couple of weeks.

    4. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      or the non-touch version for £49 @ asda, vs £89 for the kindle basic

      Assuming you can actually get it for that price at Asda. I've heard they've had similar "great" prices on things like that in the past, then it turned out that they were sold out because they only ever had a very few on sale, i.e. it was a gimmick to get you into their store.

      That said, IIRC and AFAIK you *can* get them for around £60 from some sources without too much difficulty.

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    5. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by arkhan_jg · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Into their 2nd biggest market after the US 7 months after the US - september 28th 2011 in the US, April 27 2012 in the UK. And there will probably shortages making it even longer before general availability. They withdrew the kindle keyboard without 3G (the model I had) leaving only the kindle basic @ £89, or the kindle keyboard @ £149.

      Seven months is a long time in consumer electronics. Amazon had the e-ink market pretty much to themselves for the previous couple of generations. We still don't have the kindle fire or any projection for it. (which to be fair, really involves getting all the rights for the amazon app store, the movie store etc which aren't in the UK either, so I'm not terribly surprised at that).

      But the kindle touch? No extra rights needed there, it's just an e-reader, same as the kindle 3. You can buy a kobo touch, and have been able to for months and months (backed by one of our biggest book/stationary retailers, WH Smith) for less than the kindle basic! Even when the kindle touch comes out, it's going to be £30 or 27% more expensive for what is virtually identical hardware to the kobo. If you want cheap, the kobo basic is almost half the price of the kindle basic, for again very similar hardware. You couldn't even import the touch, unless you went grey market for even more money and no warranty support.

      Amazon don't have the e-ink market to themselves in the UK any more, even if the Nooks aren't available here. For a while, the kindle beat the crap out of the alternatives for both hardware, and better pricing, but that's no longer true. Amazon need to be aware of that now with their pricing and treating us like a captive market that will hang around and wait if they don't want to lose significant share to the competition. They've still got significant mind share - everybody knows about the kindle - but that won't last forever if they keep treating us like marks to be fleeced.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    6. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      Agreed that asda sometimes are a bit 'flexible' with availability, but I know a few people who've got their hands on one, I saw them in stock at my local a few days ago, and they're currently listed as in stock on their website : http://direct.asda.com/Kobo-Wireless-eReader---Onyx/000518285,default,pd.html - you can pick up in store, or have home delivery.

      I think this one is a legit drop, rather than a gimmick special offer.

      IIRC, Asda helped drive the price of the kobo touch down from £99 to its current £80 pretty much everywhere, which I paid a couple of months ago. I wouldn't be surprised if £49 becomes the new price for the kobo wifi, down from its current £70 standard (though you can get it for £60 elsewhere, as you say). It still beats the crap out of the £89 for the kindle basic at either price.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    7. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by martin-boundary · · Score: 1
      I used to think e-ink is great, and I still read books that way, but honestly it's overhyped and much too primitive to be a good book reading device.

      The worst problem is that I can't read ebooks outside. As soon as the sun shines on the display, the e-ink starts disappearing (I believe it's something to do with the display heating up, but whatever it is, e-ink is just not good enough). The other problem is glare when reading inside. It's comparable in annoyance to those glossy paper magazines, when you read them next to a lamp.

      The last straw is the form factor. I like to read scientific papers, and the screen of just about any ebook reader is too small to read comfortably. Even if I'm reading novels, I find that with a small screen there's too much hand navigation required, basically. Whereas I would flip a piece of paper every two pages on a paperback, I have to press the next page button at least 3 times to get to the same point. It just requires too much hand interaction for my taste.

    8. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by damnbunni · · Score: 2

      My e-reader is fine in sunlight. Sounds like a problem with your particular model.

      Screen size is a trade-off; my reader has a smaller screen than most others, but it fits nicely in a pocket. I've seen readers with e-ink screens up to 9", but they're more expensive, of course.

    9. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by mrmeval · · Score: 1

      The Kobo touch seems to have a problem with refresh but a firmware flash seems to fix it by giving the user a setting for refresh of 1-6 page turns. The reviewer does not seem totally happy with the fix. The reviewer calls it ghosting and there is a screen shot. It's pretty ugly.

      http://portables.about.com/od/ebookreasers/fr/Kobo-Touch-Review.htm

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    10. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you're an active reader, the battery lasts for a week, not weeks.

    11. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      Have you tried it on the beach in summer? That's the kind of sunlight I'm talking about.

    12. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Why not get a B&N Simple Touch instead? As a side benefit, you don't feed Amazon's attempt to become the Microsoft Word of e-publishing.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    13. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by boristhespider · · Score: 1

      If you run a light off the same battery it'll last for less time than that, too.

    14. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by damnbunni · · Score: 1

      Yes.

    15. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      Nooks are not officially for sale in the UK (I don't think they ever have been), and you pay import duty to bring em in. They're not a bad price at all on ebay uk (£70), but that's US resellers, so £20-£30 shipping plus you're still liable for import duty if customs spots it. So ~ £90 to £100 even if you avoid duty. Found a UK seller, it's £105, so that's amazon touch pricing. And of course, no recourse to B&N, as it's a parallel grey import, so even if they would warranty a resold product, I'd have to ship to US in the event of fault. Plus of course the official store is in dollars, so I'm paying conversion fees to buy the books if I want bookmark sync etc.

      Much simpler to buy a kobo touch for £80, I get a local warranty from a physical retailer with wide presence, UK ebook store, and as you say, I'm not feeding the Amazon lock-in behemoth.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    16. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      Hmm. I thought this problem was the case with all e-ink readers, but doing a quick search on the net suggests it might be a problem with some displays manufactured by LG. That would be awesome.

    17. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by demonlapin · · Score: 2

      It's got to be your device. There have been three Kindles in my household, one of each generation, and none has ever looked bad in direct light - in fact they look their best in direct sun. And glare is a much bigger problem with the glossy iPad surface than the matte Kindle surface. Outdoors, nothing beats e-Ink.

    18. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      Same problem with the newer kindles - they use the same generation pearl E Ink display as the kobo. I don't have a significant issue with ghosting - it's there if you look VERY closely, or have a black-heavy image on a previous page, but it's not an issue when you're just reading text. You can set it to do a full refresh every page, same as the kindle 3, or up to every 6 page turns, which is the default. I have it set on every 4 turns on my kobo, which provides a decent balance between the two for speed/vs ghosting. Even on 6, my kobo touch shows nothing LIKE that amount of ghosting in that screen shot.

      I took a couple of quick snaps to demo;

      Here's the kobo on a mostly blank page after 5 page (back) turns before refresh (next would do a full refresh)
      https://picasaweb.google.com/103418843325186142125/Kobo#5729046541116884130
      and what it looks like in the middle of text, again after 5 turns without refresh.
      https://picasaweb.google.com/103418843325186142125/Kobo#5729047194047324946

      (ignore the slight orange cast, that's a combo of lighting and my fairly naff phone cam - the rectangular shadow middle-bottom in the first one is the phone shadow)

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    19. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by AnotherAnonymousUser · · Score: 1

      I'm curious, but did you disable the screensaver? That's supposed to keep the screen constantly refreshing to prevent exactly such a ghosting behavior over time.

    20. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by clodney · · Score: 1

      My first Kindle had a problem in hot sunlight - reading by the pool in Vegas, I learned I had to put it face down (i.e. in the shade) during page flips, or it would have trouble redrawing the screen - washed out and partially missing text.

      I went to the 3rd generation Kindle and it has never had that problem.

    21. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by John+Bokma · · Score: 1
      You can convert epub with the free cli tool kindlegen which you can download at Amazon. No need for Calibre.

      As for Amazon's after sale support.... be glad you didn't import a Kindle Touch yourself: Kindle Fire outside the USA: fun while it lasts

    22. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Amazon don't have the e-ink market to themselves in the UK any more

      Indeed. WHSmiths, one of the largest high-street book sellers, is heavily pushing the Kobo reader, and the cheapest model is about 25% cheaper than the cheapest Kindle.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    23. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I have an iRex iLiad, which is one of the first generation eInk devices from a now-defunct company. Scientific papers are fine, and I've spent many summer days sitting in the park with the sun shining directly on the screen without any display problems. I'm more concerned about the fact that the sun heats up the device beyond what I think LiIon batteries are supposed to tolerate...

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    24. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      this is completely wrong.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    25. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by mrmeval · · Score: 1

      I'd get a Kobo before a Kindle.

      Right now a friend is hawking his book on Amazon and there is no way I can find to download his book DRM free. He's not been able to turn that off or he's lied and said he cannot turn it off.

      Amazon is also forcing one-click to buy it and I won't use that. Because my friend is convinced Amazon is the shats meow I can buy it and then have them send it to me DRM free but at this point I'm not touching one-click until the patent is expired.

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    26. Re:Most people want a light for their Kindle. by LesFerg · · Score: 1

      I have a small bedside lamp which used to be sufficient for reading paper books with, but found it to be useless when trying to read my new Sony Reader. Not sure why that is, but ended up using a cover with built-in light now.

      Also the bus ride home during winter will require the light, interior lighting quality varies and last winter the drivers usedta turn off the lights randomly for some reason.

      --
      If I had a DeLorean... I would probably only drive it from time to time.
  3. What will be the e-ink screen quality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amazon used lower quality e-ink screens in the touch than the old keyboard Kindle... where will this stand?

    1. Re:What will be the e-ink screen quality? by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      > Amazon used lower quality e-ink screens in the touch than the old keyboard Kindle

      Got a link? I doubt this is true. The touch tech they use has nothing to do with the eInk screen and I doubt they wouldn't use Pearl. Maybe you're thinking of Sony's first touch attempts that used a layer on top of eInk.

  4. Betteridge's Law of Headlines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The question is, does anyone really want or need a light for their Kindle?"

    No.

    1. Re:Betteridge's Law of Headlines by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      Article:"The question is, does anyone really want or need a light for their Kindle?"

      No.

      That wasn't the headline though. I'm wondering if this is the first sign of lots of Slashdotters seizing upon the (very perceptive) Betteridge's Law and overusing it- sometimes out of context and/or incorrectly- to show how perceptive they supposedly are, as has happened with similar observations in the past.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    2. Re:Betteridge's Law of Headlines by xigxag · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that the answer to the question is obviously "yes" in the strict sense that there has to be someone out there who wants a Kindle with a built in light.

      In terms of the implication of "do enough people want a light to be a profitable venture?" the answer can only be, "nobody knows at this point, we'll wait and see," although assuredly Amazon must have some confidence that the economics will work out.

      Overall, it's just a stupid idea that Slashdot (cough timothy cough) has that the topics benefit from being kickstarted with a question, no matter how silly. It makes the summary read like the introduction to a middle school term paper.

      More significanty, there was a study done in 2010 which indicated, contrary to expectations, that reading on a (backlit) iPad is actually easier than reading on a Kindle. It wouldn't be too much of a stretch to imagine that Amazon looked at that, followed up with their own studies, and ultimately decided to hedge their bets.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    3. Re:Betteridge's Law of Headlines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More significanty, there was a study done in 2010 which indicated, contrary to expectations, that reading on a (backlit) iPad is actually easier than reading on a Kindle. It wouldn't be too much of a stretch to imagine that Amazon looked at that, followed up with their own studies, and ultimately decided to hedge their bets.

      Contrary to expectations and facts, you mean. Of the current display technologies, e-ink is the business for reading text. It pisses from a great height on any LCD display I've ever seen so far.

      It's only if you bring colour/animation into the equation that the balance changes. If you are trying to read under normal conditions (i.e. in sunlight) it's not even remotely a contest - the LCD loses massively, even the clever ones like the Pixel Qi stuff don't match e-ink. Only a seriously distorted and paid for survey could suggest different.

      This "flexlight" that Amazon is introducing has two qualities - it's part of the e-ink display (uses one LED), and sips a tiny amount of power and allows you to read in low-light conditions as well as you would in daylight. So you don't need a light on to read with a kindle.

      Now what's going to happen in future - I have no idea. But at the moment, if you are reading a novel... e-ink is it.

  5. Nook is going for Flex Lighting, so no surprise by UCFFool · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's likely that the Nook will be using Flex Lighting in its next version, due out very soon. There is even a video of it in action on a reference device. I use a clip-on light, which has the issue of glare off of the screen, so I actually think this is a viable step up, especially since it will not always be used, is always available, and will have a minimal effect on battery life. I'm actually really jealous (since I don't have the cash to play the upgrade game with my Nook Simple Touch).

    --
    "The more pity, that fools may not speak wisely what wise men do foolishly" - Touchstone,Shakespeare's "As You Like It"
  6. As long as there is a brightness changer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I struggle because I read late at night with the wife asleep next to me. I can't read books then either - because a lamp will wake her up. However, if I could have a very dim backlight - #totalwin

  7. I'm still.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not understanding why one would get one of these things instead of just getting a Kindle Fire and having the benefit of the device itself lighting up?

    1. Re:I'm still.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because reading LCD screens, particularly in darkened rooms, is hard on the eyes compared to E-Ink devices (even with their lower contrast).

    2. Re:I'm still.... by ColdWetDog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because reading LCD screens, particularly in darkened rooms, is hard on the eyes compared to E-Ink devices (even with their lower contrast).

      I'm going to call BS on that. Going white on black and dropping the brightness on my iPad, I can read for hours in a dark room. In fact, it's easier doing that than reading a paper book with a nightlight. Sure, if you crank the brightness up to eye bleeding levels and don't adjust it for ambient conditions then it's going to be annoying, but most people can handle the 'brightness' slider.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    3. Re:I'm still.... by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      And yet there are hordes of people that prefer eInk for long reading than LCD, especially with more and more people staring at LCDs for 10 hours a day at work. There are also a number of other benefits of eInk over tablets, but the great thing is that people have that choice, and a light for their reader will just make their device of choice that much more usable to them.

    4. Re:I'm still.... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I have found that the best device to read in the dark is actually my AMOLED phone. Its blacks are really black - no backlight! - and FBReader lets me tune brightness down to the level only slightly above #000000, which is still contrasting enough against real black to be easily seen once the eyes adjust to darkness, but so low that it doesn't strain the eye at all. I actually start with a higher brightness setting after turning off the light, and then gradually lower it down as eyes re-adjust.

      But, yes, reading from any LCD screen is just horrible. Once your eyes reconfigure themselves for darkness, the damn thing is like a lamp even when it's all black with no text at all (tried with iPhone 4 and iPad 2).

  8. just a minor correction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The company they bought was actually Modilis Oy, not Oy Modilis. OY stands for LTD and the proper way to write it is after the company name UNLESS they use the swedish abb. as well; then the name is Oy Modilis Ab.

    Just something to be clarified if people want to research the company.

  9. Not blue light! by WillKemp · · Score: 2, Informative

    I wouldn't have a Kindle if you paid me, but occasionally i wouldn't mind if my Kobo touch had a built in light. However, given that recent research has shown that blue light at night is bad for you in various ways, it would be much better if the built in light was towards the red end of the spectrum.

    1. Re:Not blue light! by reub2000 · · Score: 1

      If your so worried about night vision, then why not invest in an eye patch?

    2. Re:Not blue light! by Tim+the+Gecko · · Score: 3, Funny

      If your so worried about night vision, then why not invest in an eye patch?

      Arrrrr!! Write "you're" next time, or face a keelhaulin', ye scurvy dog!

    3. Re:Not blue light! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Huh, I was about to reply and go "Blue light's better for your eyes at night," but decided to take a second and see what you might be talking about. Turns out there's some studies showing blue light suppresses melatonin production, so using a blue light in bed would really be bad. I've gotta thank you, and also finally go put some tape over that fucking blue LED in my bedroom that was only mildly annoying before.

    4. Re:Not blue light! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some one gave me one... I have bought a sum total of 2 books and downloaded 10 free ones. That is after 6 months of usage.

      Its ok. Bit on the heavy side for long term reading though.

      Thing is I have more books already than I can ever read. And just swing by a library or go splunking on the internet if I want something...

      It is a neat toy. For someone who is into reading all the time it is probably pretty cool. For someone who reads occasionally (like me) its a 'meh'. I wonder what happens when the battery is no longer any good in it... What happens to my books 10 years from now?

    5. Re:Not blue light! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he is more worried that blue light before bed messes up with sleep because light in the blue spectrum is seen by the body as daylight and resets the body clock.

    6. Re:Not blue light! by anagama · · Score: 1

      Why -- just why -- does everything have a blue light anymore? Blue LEDs are everywhere and even on devices meant to be used in darkened rooms (monitors, TVs, DVD players, etc). I had been hoping the blue light fad would die out, but it's been years now. When will it end?

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    7. Re:Not blue light! by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't have a Kindle if you paid me, but occasionally i wouldn't mind if my Kobo touch had a built in light. However, given that recent research has shown that blue light at night is bad for you in various ways, it would be much better if the built in light was towards the red end of the spectrum.

      why so much hate for the kindle?? the thing that invented the e-reader?
      i agree that a dim red light would be highly preferable to a bright white one. though it wouldn't look cool in videos and adverts.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    8. Re:Not blue light! by WillKemp · · Score: 1

      why so much hate for the kindle?

      I don't hate it, i just don't want one. I try and avoid corporate lock-in wherever i can. If it supported epub format i wouldn't have any problems with it at all.

    9. Re:Not blue light! by David_W · · Score: 1

      Arrrrr!! Write "you're" next time, or face a keelhaulin', ye scurvy dog!

      A grammar pirate? Well, that's a new one...

    10. Re:Not blue light! by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      but it does support mobi. and epub is easily converted to mobi.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    11. Re:Not blue light! by Tha_Big_Guy23 · · Score: 1

      I've got a huge library of .mobi books, and when I want to read one, I copy it to my kindle and it shows up in my list of available titles on my Kindle 3. Haven't had a single problem with any .mobi books and I've read hundreds that way.

      --
      If you're looking here for something insightful or thought provoking, you're probably looking in the wrong place.
    12. Re:Not blue light! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iPatch for iGrammar iZans and piRates.

    13. Re:Not blue light! by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      kind of exactly my point.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    14. Re:Not blue light! by WillKemp · · Score: 1

      [......] epub is easily converted to mobi.

      How do you convert drm'd epub to mobi?

    15. Re:Not blue light! by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      you don't. that's why drm is considered bad. and that's why you shouldn't buy from stores that give you drm'd files. in fact its great that kindle does NOT support drm.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
  10. Can any headline ending "?" be answered "no"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See headline.

  11. WOW by Jetboy01 · · Score: 0

    It will be just like my Gameboy from circa 20 years ago!

  12. It depends by jamesl · · Score: 1

    The question is, does anyone really want or need a light for their Kindle?

    Need? Some do.

    Want? It depends on the price. It depends on what Nook offers.

    Amazon sells clip-on lights and lighted covers so I guess they have a better idea than anyone of what people want and are willing to pay for.

    The Fire is "lighted" by default.

  13. "Does anyone really want a light in their Kindle?" by Ozoner · · Score: 1

    Yes please !!!!!

    The Kindle is great, but for some reason it needs a really bright light to read with in bed.

  14. Yes, I want a light. by radio4fan · · Score: 2

    The question is, does anyone really want or need a light for their Kindle?

    Yes.

    To me, it's already like a magic book. A magic book that lights up has got to be better!

    1. Re:Yes, I want a light. by Nimey · · Score: 1

      I have such a beast already for my Kindle - my wife bought me the official cover that's got a deployable LED light which gets power from the Kindle's battery. It's pretty slick, and the only complaint I have is that she spent too much on it - I think it was ~$50 for the cover at the time.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    2. Re:Yes, I want a light. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The price Amazon charges for those LED covers is definitely a rip-off, but they can get away with it because theirs is the only one that doesn't actually suck (as in, produce highly contrasting small spots of light).

  15. colour eInk by Tritium3.016 · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it's to compensate for any deficiencies that colour eInk may exhibit? A colour eInk Kindle being pure speculation on my part of course,

  16. Yes. by Xenex · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The question is, does anyone really want or need a light for their Kindle?

    Yes. My Kindle has been gathering dust since purchasing an iPad. I actually prefer a backlit screen; easier in low-light conditions. Shrug.

    1. Re:Yes. by __aaqvdr516 · · Score: 1

      I went full circle. I had a e-ink Nook, then my wife bought a Kindle Fire. Reading on the backlit screen is more tiring than reading on the e-ink screen with an external LED light.

      The problem with the Nook is that it has rounded edges, so I pretty much need to find some sort of case to put it in that has a light. All the clips I've tried don't attach well, like they would on a book. It should have come with a built in LED light source.

    2. Re:Yes. by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      Ditto. I loved my Kindle (first version, got it when it came out) but my iPad is much better for me because I tend to mark my books up to hell and gone which was possible but difficult to do with the Kindle.

      I also use a lot of reference books, journals, etc. and again while the Kindle let me search, the search capability is much, much easier to work with on the iPad.

      Now, if we could have an iPad with a full-color e-ink screen that was as good as the iPad 2 (but retina would be amazing) and just as responsive as the iPad is currently, with the ability to turn on and off backlighting - THAT would be something wonderful and completely compelling for me.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  17. Keep it the same, make sure I can turn it off! by Secret+Agent+Man · · Score: 3

    The Kindle is a neat little thing. It's the closest thing to a book in terms of text, and can store nigh-unlimited amounts of books. I love the size and the fact that it's comfortable to read for long periods of time. I have the Kindle app on my iPad too, but I can't stare at a backlit screen with a white background for that long. With that said, there's nothing wrong with adding new features! If I'm in an area without much natural light (say, riding in a car at night where turning on other lights may distract the driver), then a backlit screen would be great. As long as I can turn the backlight off (further preserving the awesome battery life, which I forgot to mention in the last paragraph), I'm all for it!

    1. Re:Keep it the same, make sure I can turn it off! by StikyPad · · Score: 2

      I have the Kindle app on my iPad too, but I can't stare at a backlit screen with a white background for that long.

      Perhaps you are not aware that you can configure the Kindle app to use white text on a black background?

  18. Yes it does need a light by Torp · · Score: 1

    Dimmable and with an on/off switch please, and then i may stop reading on the iPad :)

    --
    I apologize for the lack of a signature.
  19. Maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use my Kindle regularly and occasionally wish it were backlit. But only occasionally. I am 64 and my eyes are a bit fuzzy under low light reading conditions. But with native eBooks I can adjust the type size to compensate and rescale later when the light improves. PDFs are a problem, however. The zoom function is less than satisfactory for reading and I have largely abandoned trying to read pdf format magazines on the Kindle. Those stay on the server and get read from a laptop. And the network connection stays off unless I have an urge to shop. The other posters are right, the Kindle does one thing only and does it well -- when my existing unit packs it in I would not reject a Kindle with built-in screen lighting. But I would not switch to one for it if my existing DX still worked.

  20. Wrong question by Opportunist · · Score: 0

    The question should rather be, does anyone want or need a Kindle altogether who doesn't already have one?

    Seriously, if that's the big feature, then keep it. Not only because backlighting is about the most tiring way to illuminate text, simply because ... who will sensibly buy a new kindle for the single reason that he can avoid attaching a light source?

    A light for the kindle would sell quite a bit better if you ask me.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who wants to attach a clunky light? One of the things I love about the kindle touch is that it is small and sleek. I can tuck in in my back pocket or an inside pocket of my coat. I can always have it with me. I want to be able to read in dark locations but I don't want some bulky light that sucks down batteries. I'd pay and extra $50 to have an efficient light built into the unit.

    2. Re:Wrong question by Brian+Feldman · · Score: 1

      It is not backlit,

      --
      Brian Fundakowski Feldman
    3. Re:Wrong question by KevReedUK · · Score: 1

      ... backlighting is about the most tiring way to illuminate text...

      From TFS:

      going to have a front-lit display.

      Glad to see it's still situation normal around here with few reading TFS, and fewer still TFA. They say the Slashdot effect has mostly disappeared due to advances in server capabilities, but I'm starting to think it's because the percentage of us who actually bother to follow the links is dwindling into insignificance!

      --
      Just my $0.03 (At current exchange rates, my £0.02 is worth more than your $0.02)
  21. Blue is certainly an intersesting choice by milbournosphere · · Score: 1

    I've always found that orange hued displays are easiest on my eyes. Blue is up there on the visible wavelength, and most of the blue LEDs out there are shockingly bright. You'd think they'd go for something lower in the spectrum.

  22. Airplanes! by errandum · · Score: 1

    Surprised no one mentioned this. On long overnight trips all the lights go out, and there are times when you can't (or shouldn't) use the seat lights. I already use the cover that provides light, but it provides very little in the way of protection to the kindle, so it's a hassle keep putting it on and off.

    I'd trade my kindle for a new one if they came up with a lighted one.

  23. no more blue light please by billyswong · · Score: 1

    There are already too many stupid gadgets in blue since the advancement of blue LED. Blue light disrupt sleeping cycle and irritate my eyes. Be friendly and give me a softer light please. (Since it is probably done in LED) Amber or green would be great, just don't use blue.

  24. Tri-colour LEDs (RGB) by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    It would be great if they used tri-colour LEDs so that you could smoothly tune the light colour across the spectrum, to choose the colour best for readability in the environment you're currently in.

    1. Re:Tri-colour LEDs (RGB) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THIS!

      Of course, being a 50um thick wide-area light-guide it probably invokes some clever optical properties to create that even glow, and may well be sensitive to precise placement of the LED. But if they could get a tri-color LED with all three elements within the tolerance threshold... well that would certainly be my first pick.

  25. Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The question is, does anyone really want or need a light for their Kindle?

    There *is* such a thing as a stupid question.

  26. Until by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Until I saw the 'solution' in action, I was skeptical. But once I saw the video, I was impressed. (And btw I am NOT an Cramazon fanboy.)

    The illumation/powerdrain, on/off feature is compelling, and if it means I can use it to light up my tent at night, so much the better. Of course if it projects the image of whatever I'm reading onto the tent walls, I might have to consider it a security risk. But since I don't work for the gubment or surf p()rn while I'm in the woods, it's no big deal.

  27. Silly Final Sentence by skywire · · Score: 1

    The question is, does anyone really want or need a light for their Kindle?

    That's a lot like ending a story about a new agricultural technology with "But does anyone really want or need to eat?"

    --
    Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
  28. Bigger screen + better refresh rate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As much as I love my Kindle for giving me back my summer days, it and other e-readers are fundamentally flawed for about 50% of my reading experiences.

    Aside from novels, most of what I read are textbooks and scientific papers in .pdf format. As .pdfs cannot do line wrap like their .epub and .mobi counterpart, whenever you're given a paper initially rendered with a somewhat small font on a large page size, your options are very limited.

    1. You can try to convert it to .mobi or .epub but it will most likely fail if your source contains any diagrams or mathematical equations.
    2. You can zoom out while the texts becomes hardly readable.
    3. You can switch your kindle orientation to landscape so that the screen can at least encompass a whole line but as your pages become split in two half, the reading experience quickly becomes really tedious if every now and then you need to refer to some diagram at the top/bottom of the page.

    The only solution (aside from some magic software that could do a proper conversion) really is to have a BIG screen and this is why I bought a Kindle Dx. Still, let me tell you that for around 50% of what I read (novels put aside), it's clearly not enough.

    The second problem, partly related to the screen size issue, is the refresh rate. For technical papers especially, I often find myself in the need to do some back and fourth between my current location and say, some figure 4 or 5 pages back and when you wish to do this quickly on a e-ink reader, the page rendering time is simply just too slow. (Aside from that, that small keyboard configuration where you need to press alt to enter any number (read page numbers) really is the most annoying of things for a device where most of what you'll ever be wanting to enter are in fact page numbers).

    While a front-lit display sure is a nice to have, those are, in my opinion, the real issues Amazon will have to solve if they wish to provide a proper e-reader.

    1. Re:Bigger screen + better refresh rate by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      What you say has been argued back and forth for years now. eInk is what it is. And it's up to the maker of the screen, not Amazon, to improve it. eInk isn't an LCD, so if you want to watch movies, you don't buy an eInk reader. It really can't be simpler than that. If you want to flip around large page format documents, a 6" eInk likely isn't for you.

      As for PDF, it really depends on the document. Text-only ones can reflow nicely on Sony's reader. You can use PDF authoring software to crop the pages. You can use the reader in landscape mode. And use any combination of the aforementioned.

      It's the same debate in everything, even motorcycling. I like to commute in the city, but would also like to go on long trips. A touring bike with luggage is nice for the trip, but a small displacement "naked" bike is better for the city. So you either have one of each for each style of riding you do, or you compromise, you get a "jack of all trades," and you try to work around the shortcomings.

  29. I design the best reading the light for the Kindle by hirschma · · Score: 1

    ...and no one wanted it. Seriously:

    http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/pieco/kapsule-lightstand-kindle-accessory

    I guess if it's built-in and "free", people will want a reading light. Otherwise, not so much.

  30. Depends on the usage model by dbc · · Score: 1

    We have 3 Kindles, an original, the 2nd gen, and a Fire. Mostly my daughter uses the 2nd gen and the Fire. Which one gets taken along in the car depends not so much on what content is loaded on which kindle, but on things like: Will it be dark when we are driving back from the gym?

    In other words, a self-lighting book is usable in places a dead-trees book is inconvenient. I would definitely like a lighted Kindle that had good battery life.

  31. Re:I design the best reading the light for the Kin by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Why do you believe that your light is the "best"? Particularly, why do you think it's better than Amazon's LED cover?

    I have tried many "gooseneck" lights, and they all have the same basic problem - they focus the light too much, resulting in a very annoying bright spot. Looking at the video, your light has the same exact problem. Amazon one is different because they used a thin and narrow "stripe" LED, and placed it at just the right angle to provide a very nice, even coverage of the screen.

  32. Re:I design the best reading the light for the Kin by hirschma · · Score: 1

    Why was it the best?

    It was cheaper. It used less electricity, about 1/3 as much. Despite the video, it threw more diffuse and even light than the Amazon cover. The LED used was "warmer". It was provided a kickstand feature, and worked great as an ergo-grip. The light could be adjusted optimally for many different reading angles and positions, while the Amazon light worked just for one (it's not good for reading in bed, for example).

    And for some folks, the Amazon light offends their vegan sensibilities, and mine doesn't.

    Things like close-up lighting are really hard to get right on video, FYI.

  33. Yes, yes they do by treerex · · Score: 1

    My wife suffers from insomnia and often reads in the middle of the night: having a light on her kindle would be a godsend.

  34. Re:I design the best reading the light for the Kin by waives · · Score: 1

    I'm guessing you did a lousy job promoting your kickstarter, but your reward structure is also shit. The only one worth backing is the $40 level. Also it's honestly a pretty boring project - I only back kickstarters if there is something unique about them that I can't get anywhere else. A claimed reduction in power usage doesn't really cut it.

  35. Re:I design the best reading the light for the Kin by hirschma · · Score: 1

    Actually did a good job promoting the campaign, but the rest of the critique is fair enough.

    But that was my original point - people don't get excited over Kindle lights.

  36. Omestes "OmessedUp" trolling? LMAO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ur trolling hypocrite bs caught up 2U -> http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2772023&cid=39612033 and what a damned hypocrite u r, troll. Unbelievable. Pot calling the kettle black if I ever saw it, lol!