Sentences with phrase «kindle did»

Near the end of your interview with Pastor Mark Pierce, he mentioned that every now and then someone on his account purchases a book and he's not sure which kindle did that.
my kindle did nt mess up untill 1 and a half days later, but that might be because i did nt use it in flight
After I had restarted the kindle it did seem to help my battery life but it's still extremely poor especially since a lot of the time it's in standby but drains a LOT.
Apps such as kindle did not cause any problems but even the ten app was freezing my emulator when ran in combination with other apps.
I was impressed that it's selling for pretty much what I paid for my old kindle did new.
Kindles do not lend themselves to secretive or clandestine exchanges - which could harm espionage.
The current black and white kindles do not have this function which is a great loss.
(Sometime similar to what kindle does or google books)?
Technically newer Kindles do support a form of text - to - speech but the feature is meant as an accessibility feature for visually impaired people.
Technically newer Kindles do support a form -LSB-...]
Will it also offer all - bold text options — which the recent E Ink Kindles do not, despite my pleas and others»?
Other models of the newer Kindles don't even have audio functionality.
My current Kindle edition has some formatting editions (Kindles don't take too kindly to drop caps, sidebars, and the like), so rather than reformat the first edition, which was somewhat out of date, given that it was published in 2007, I just decided to crack out the new edition and then correct the Kindle edition all at the same time.
It also plays mp3 files and the newer Kindles do not.
All Kindles do the same thing — push Kindle book sales on Amazon.
Instant Translations: The Paperwhite has a translating feature other Kindles don't offer.
It does have a smaller processor, it also does do graphic novels and all the video formats the kindle does.
How many Kindles did Amazon sell after the Oprah announcement through the Kindle going out of stock?
Theresa, you are right that the early Kindles did have the ability to «read» books out loud.
Compatible with the ePub format, which Amazon's Kindles don't support.
Support for ePub is a big deal since this is the format many libraries are using for e-books, and currently, Kindles don't support it.
Most paid ones do, but the Kindles do read DRM free ebooks as well.
Of course, the answer is that Kindles don't compete with Kindles, they compete with Nooks and each vendor independently decided to set the prices.
Kindles don't support epubs, they don't (easily) allow installing extra reading apps, their cheaper devices display ads (so I have heard).
With my kindle I don't have that problem.
With Fire tablets you can install any dictionary app that you want but Kindles don't support apps.
The other Kindles didn't do so badly either: the Kindle Touch and basic Kindle were the second and third best - selling products in December, respectively.
4) Checking out the software version of the device — In the case, if your kindle doesn't have the latest software, then you will require updating the device to the new software version which is available.
Last week someone left a comment complaining about how Kindles sucked compared to Kobos because Kindles don't allow you to -LSB-...]
Last week someone left a comment complaining about how Kindles sucked compared to Kobos because Kindles don't allow you to use your own dictionaries.
For instance, Amazon's Kindles do not support EPUB without first being converted whereas Apple's iPad does not directly welcome Amazon's proprietary format, AZW / MOBI / KF8.
The question shouldn't be «How many Kindles did Amazon sell?»
I've found that using my e-ink kindle doesn't cause any problems.
Critics gripe that Kindles don't allow for displaying ads and are poor substitutes for the look and feel of thumbing through pages.
It used to be the good thing that the Kobos and Nooks had expandable storage, where the Kindles did not.
I don't understand trim size and while the pictures are fine for kindle they don't work for a two page 8 × 10 spread.
So, anyway, the few works of fiction I have bought on kindle I don't feel like I really «own».
And things like scrolling, highlighting, and pinch - zooming are really laggy and hard to use, whereas the Kindles don't have problems like that.
Kindles do not run iOS or android.
The purchase of a kindle does not beholden a customer for life to Amazon.
Our libraries use the Overdrive system, which the Kobo range of readers support, but Kindles do not.
Yes, it's an e-reader, and Kindles don't have audio any more either, but it's also an Android tablet, of sorts, and those do.
So it's a little annoying that Kindles do not collect books by series (or at least, I have not found how to make this happen), and it's annoying too that this metadata is not included in the KF8 -LRB-.
My kindle doesn't get much use.
In my opinion one of the most important options the kindle doesn't have is the possibility to create subfolders, or to exchange folders via your explorer directly (and keep the folders on your kindle)... Is there a way to do that?
It's pretty clear that Kindles do offer affordances that the physical book can not.
Since Kindles do not have menus or controls that are ADA compliant for visually impaired users, alternative resources that replicate the educational experience must be provided.
At least the previous basic Kindle offered something that other Kindles did not, with the page buttons and a non-touchscreen interface.
I thought Kindles didn't support ePub, just.
How many Kindles do you suppose Amazon could sell if they priced it at $ 99, or $ 49?
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