This week Amazon released the Send To Kindle application for Mac users. It is a free application that lets you send documents from your computer to registered Kindle devices, supported Kindle apps and your Kindle Library.
Click to enlargeAlthough the Kindle reader had been available on PCs for several months, the Mac version is brand new, and I decided to try it out. You can simply use this link to. It’s a free application, although you’ll need an Amazon account to use the Kindle store. Amazon says that the offers over 450,000 books. Kindle for Mac comes with “Whispersync” which automatically saves and synchronizes bookmarks and remembers the last page you read, whether on an actual Kindle, or in the Kindle for Mac software. Click to enlargeThe Kindle for Mac software does a pretty good job of emulating the Kindle hardware, without the eInk screen technology, of course. It presents a basic text interface and shows why typographers are wondering if they are practicing a dying craft.
On the opening screen you’ll see a sample of a book I downloaded from the Kindle store, Publish Your Book on the Amazon Kindle by Michael R. Hicks, and on the next screen you can see what a typical page from this book looks like. I tried to find a book on book design among the horde of 450,000 books, but no luck. Instead I sampled The Web Designer’s Idea Book by Patrick McNeil. It did contain simple embedded screen grabs with live links if you wanted to open your browser and visit the sites listed, which is basically an acknowledgment that the Kindle simply isn’t designed for this type of color display. Avery cd label software for mac.
A Lead That May Prove Temporary The advantage of the Kindle at the moment is the depth (outside of book design titles, that is) of the Kindle store. In addition to the reputed 450,000 titles, the store also provides automatic delivery of • Newspapers • Magazines • Blog feeds (including ) Eight of the top ten bestsellers on Kindle today were free downloads. Not sure why they call them “sellers” since nothing was sold. Today’s price for the Kindle in the US is $259 for the 6″ diagonal screen, and $489 for the 9.7″ diagonal screen. The upcoming Apple iPad, also with a 9.7″ diagonal screen, starts at $499. This is simply an unfair comparison, no matter how you cut it. I suppose if you like the simplicity of being able to do one thing, and only one thing, on a very readable black and white screen with virtually no graphics capability, Kindle is a good deal.