Enjoying my new Kindle in Chennai, India!

My dream has finally come true! Well, in all truth, it’s been true now for over a month, but it’s only now that I really have the leisure to write about it. Yes, I have a lovely new Kindle from Amazon and have been immersing myself in the glories of the E-Ink technology!

Those who know me are aware that I’ve switched to ebooks since 2004 with a variety of Devices starting with my Tungsten T, then my O2 and finally the iPod Touch. I’ve read hundreds of books on smartphone like devices, never bothering about the small screens (after all, it’s the font size that matters) and the less than stellar battery life. They still outdid physical books by a very long shot. Here were the reasons for switching to ebooks:

  1. Don’t need to carry around trunks of books
  2. Don’t need to maintain them
  3. Can carry thousands of books in my pocket

Till now however, devices like the Kindle were too expensive for a cheapo like me. Though I salivated over the latest Kindle from Amazon and the Sony Ereader, I simply couldn’t bring myself to purchase a device when my needs were already so well met by the iPod Touch.

My Gorgeous new Kindle!
My Gorgeous new Kindle!

But then came along a contest organized by the freelancing website where I work,  oDesk.com which offered a Kindle as the first prize for a Haiku writing contest! I couldn’t resist and greedily submitted my Haikus which I was sure would win the prize. I looked forward to the day the results would be announced – so sure was I that mine would be the winning entry. Alas, when the day arrived I found to my consternation that I had come second and that my only prize was a T-shirt :(

I thought I’d lost the opportunity forever. Anupa (my wife) however, thought this the perfect time to surprise me with a new year’s gift. She thought my Haiku was better than the winning entry (and I secretly agreed with her :D), and decided that I deserved one of the few things in life that I actually wanted. So it arrived the next day, all wrapped up and beauuuuutiful!

Sexy Kindle cover
Sexy Kindle cover

Since then I’ve transferred my reading exclusively to the Kindle when I’m at home which I almost always am. My job as a freelancer doesn’t require me to travel out of the house and in these circumstances, the Kindle is perfect. On the rare occasions when I do leave the house for some reason, I still carry the iPod Touch with me for a quick mobile read. So why did I give up the iPod Touch for the Kindle? These were the main reasons:

  1. E-Ink technology allows me to read in full light without a glare
  2. The battery life is around 8,000 page turns! Around 2.5 books – perfect for a long flight
  3. Larger screen means more text on the page and fewer page turns

So far, it’s been an absolute ball reading on it. I’ve already polished off seven books or so with this neat device. Anupa even bundled a beautiful case for it. It now looks just like a regular thin book and only I know that it’s a one stop shop for all my reading needs. It basically saved my life on the 25-30 hr flight from Chicago to Frankfurt to Mumbai and finally to Chennai.

The only disappointment so far is that the famous “Whispernet” technology doesn’t work in Chennai though it’s supposed to. In Chicago, I was even able to browse the Internet at no charge and I’m supposed to be able to do the same in Chennai as well since Amazon claims coverage here too. It’ll be really cool if that works and would make it a killer device. It comes with a built in dictionary which is damn neat as well. The cursor allows you to navigate to difficult words and the definition automatically pops up. And the extra space at the bottom allows me to get a nice solid grip on it.

One can also read Tamil PDFs on the Kindle. There are some problems converting such PDFs to mobi and epub files, but the PDFs themselves can be transferred directly onto the Kindle and read with ease depending on the magnification which can be changed to make reading small fonts easier. The same is true for all Indian languages.

Another convenience is the fact that the “Next page” buttons are located on both the left as well as on the right. So if my right hand is busy, I can still turn the pages. Perfect for eating and reading at the same time :D . Okkkk, I just realized that sounds really perverted, but the sentence stands!

Of course, I’m hardly a model customer for Amazon who expects me to log into their website from the Kindle and purchase books from them. No siree. Instead I download books onto my PC and use the super duper open source program Calibre to transfer the books onto the Kindle. I’m now reading “Of Human Bondage” by Somerset Maugham and have Isaac Asimov’s entire Foundation Series lined up for my reading pleasure! Going by all this, it’s not surprising that I’m a very happy man :)

For those of us living in India, you can order the Kindle from Amazon for an equivalent for Rs. 16,000 or so. The US price of $250 is increased by the customs duty in India. Still, not too bad I would say all things considered. I suppose we should be glad they’re shipping it at all. But if you can get a friend of yours to pick it up in the US and simply give it to you when he or she lands, that would save you some Rs. 4,000 . May or may not be worth it for you. If you do decide to order it from India itself, keep an eye out for unscrupulous delivery men who will try and take money from you just as they deliver it claiming import fees. Take the Kindle away from them first (by pretending to agree) and then ask them for a receipt and a bill. And then call their delivery company and report them.

I’m sure in a few years, ereaders will come out in full force into the Indian market. I’m looking forward to improvements and innovations, and most importantly, cheaper prices as well!

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62 thoughts on “Enjoying my new Kindle in Chennai, India!”

  1. I'm pretty old fashioned about my books. But we do read a lot. And my wife was saying the ebooks are cheaper than the real ones…is that true? Or are they even free? I'm not seeing myself spending 16,000 bucks any time soon, but if it saves money in the long run, it might be worth considering down the road.

    BTW, got some nice feedback on your guest post. And you got other people thinking as well: http://where-the-mind-wanders.blogspot.com/2010/0

    Cheers,
    HB

    Reply

  2. @Hari Batti
    I agree that 16,000 isn't something I would have spent myself. I just got lucky and got it as a gift from my wife. But having used it, it's one of the most utilitarian things I've ever been gifted. My wife loves me to use it because it reminds me of her :)

    Nice post by Nitya on the subject of schooling. Always good to see little islands of change here and there…

    Reply

  3. Hey Bhagwad,

    I do envy u for the kindle in your hand :( No problem, I am more than happy with my HTC touch and my Audiobooks that help me while driving, eating, getting ready for office and the list goes on. My latest engagement is Bhagwad Geeta and next in the row is Cash Flow Quadrant and Brian Tracy and here too the list goes on…
    Sajid

    Reply

  4. @Sajid
    My wife had an HTC Touch which she used for reading and audiobooks as well! She really loved it. Unfortunately, we lost it in a railway station in Schaumburg on the way to Detroit :(

    So now she's bought the HTC hero to do the same. Very cool device!

    Reply

  5. Hello Bhagwad, good to see your interesting blog. I live in chicago too.

    btw, a quick Q.. did you try reading PDF doc (Tamil / hindi content) in Kindle? does it work??

    Prasanna

    Reply

      • In reply to bhagwad

        Bhagwad, Thanks for the quick reply. did you mean even PDF docs in indian languages?

        I really want to get a Kindle DX, but didn't go for it, coz of the lack of pdf (tamil) capabilities. I think, its time for me to get one. Thx

        Reply

      • In reply to Abhilash Shastry

        I tried several combination of Tamil files to read in ‘Kindle Keyboard 3G’. There were all combination of files, PDFs with scanned tamil pages (showing content as image), PDFs with typed Tamil content with non true type fonts, PDFs with true type fonts, PDFs with Unicode fonts (Latha.ttf), a text file with Tamil characters.

        Kindle rendered all the above as image, including PDFs with unicode characters. The text file with Tamil characters were displayed just as question marks. So, this leaves me with a conclusion that Kindle by default does not have Tamil fonts installed. When a page is to be read, it tries to recognise the content and if it fails it just shows as an image. When it recognise the contents and it has no way to show as an image as in case of a text file, the contents are interpreted and shown as question marks.

        I have seen other discussion threads where one has to jailbreak the kindle to install Tamil Unicode fonts and then using a Tamil unicode document just as good as it was done in English with automatic text wrap based on font size.

        Thought to put it here as it might be helpful for others.

        Regards,
        Narayanan (SendtoNarayanan at hot mail dot com)

        Reply

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