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+21 +1
This is why you should get a Kindle if you don’t read.
Just like productivity resonating with me, so does the idea of reading. I like the appearance of it when someone is head down, engrossed and oblivious to the world around them. I like the fact that it is portable and can be done anywhere, on the beach, in the bath, in bed or on the toilet if you so desire. I like the perceived intelligence, the demeanour and the aura that reading emanates, no matter how much of a load of shit that may be.
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+14 +1
The 'Future Book' Is Here, but It's Not What We Expected
The future book was meant to be interactive, moving, alive. Its pages were supposed to be lush with whirling doodads, responsive, hands-on. The old paperback Zork choose-your-own-adventures were just the start. The Future Book would change depending on where you were, how you were feeling. It would incorporate your very environment into its story—the name of the coffee shop you were sitting at, your best friend’s birthday. It would be sly, maybe a little creepy.
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+17 +1
Amazon Kindle Oasis review
My favorite way to test any e-reader is to see if I still like using it when my reading material isn’t exactly thrilling. For the past week, I’ve been using Amazon’s newest Kindle to get through a book called Oh Crap! Potty Training and I still like reading on it more than any Kindle I’ve tried. Since its debut in 2007, each generation of the Kindle has added new features...
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+13 +1
Amazon’s Kindle Oasis is the funkiest e-reader it’s ever made
Amazon’s philosophy with the Kindle line has been consistent for nearly 10 years now — to make the device disappear, by making it as close to paper as possible. However, with the release of its latest model, called the Kindle Oasis, Amazon is shining a spotlight on the Kindle design itself. It’s bringing its flagship e-reader back into the consumer tech conversation with a bold device, and it carries with it some new compromises.
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Is Amazon’s New Self-Publishing Pay-By-Page Policy Good For Writers?
How much money can writers make when paid by the number of pages read?…
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+2 +1
Amazon confused on the meaning of less?
I was browsing Amazon for some deals on books, when I spotted this. In the literary fiction deals of $3.99 or less, the cheapest book was actually $4.55. Which, to my experience isn't less than $3.99
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#1 New York Times Bestseller, I Know This Much Is True is $1.99 on Kindle today. (4.5 Stars, 1894 Reviews)
#1 New York Times Bestseller, I Know This Much Is True (P.S.) - Kindle edition by Wally Lamb. It gets 4.5 Stars out of nearly 2000 reviews.
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