Kindle WiFi

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The Kindle Wi-Fi is the same unit as the Kindle 3G + Wi-Fi without the 3G capability. This unit has been renamed by Amazon to Kindle Keyboard Wi-Fi. The changes include:

Direct link to Amazon description

Here is the 3G version wiki page.

Amazon Kindle 3G WiFi

This hardware has been renamed by Amazon to Kindle Keyboard 3G+Wi-Fi.

Amazon Kindle 3G + Wi-Fi

Overview

The Kindle 3G + Wi-Fi offers a 6" display using E Ink with both a cellular network and Wi-Fi connection to permit purchase and download of eBooks and other content from Amazon. This means that no computer is needed for the Kindle although a USB connection is provided so that a computer can be used with this device. A keyboard is built into the device which can be used to add notes to documents, enter search terms etc. DRM is supported on AZW and TPZ files purchased from Amazon's Kindle Store. The Kindle 3 is also able to open password-protected PDF.

New with this release:

There is TTS support but unfortunately, some books available through Amazon now have the text-to-speech (TTS) facility disabled. Because of protests by an author's group that TTS may adversely affect revenues generated by audio books, Amazon has agreed to disable this facility when requested by the publisher.

Specifications

History

The Amazon Kindle 3G WiFi is a 3rd generation Kindle, following the Amazon Kindle 2 and the Amazon Kindle 1.

See Also

Amazon Kindle 3G + Wi-Fi description

For specifications on the display technology see: E Ink display. Note that this device has 16 level gray scale.

To compare this device with other electronic ink devices see: E-book Reader Matrix

To check the status of Amazon services see: http://status.aws.amazon.com/

Amazon Kindle Reviews

Amazon Kindle FAQ

Kindle Download Guide from Feedbooks.com

Whispernet

Some Amazon Kindle devices include a cell-phone-type data service that Amazon calls Whispernet. There are some recent version that have "Wi-Fi" only models. The newest units supports only the 3G service but Whispernet itself can work with older units using EVDO as well. International sites use 3G service and include VAT in the price of the book but the download is still free. If you are using Roaming such as visiting Europe with your US based product you will be charged $1.99 to download a book.

Older Whispernet

This service was available on Amazon Kindle 1 and Amazon Kindle 2. It used EVDO facilities from Sprint but the user does not need to sign up for the service. It provides free download of purchased eBooks and free browsing of the Wikipedia encyclopedia. This is a wireless service and may be turned off independently from the device itself. Note that the International version first available on the Kindle 2 and later the Kindle DX had both Sprint and AT&T 3G service. In January 2010 they announced 3G wireless with fallback to EDGE/GPRS coverage (lower speed).

User content conversion

Some other formats can be converted to Kindle format by sending them to Amazon's web site. This user converted content can also be optionally be downloaded via Whispernet for USD$.15 per Megabyte in the US and USD$.99 per megabyte internationally. User content conversion is free if you don't use Whispernet.

Formats that can be converted include:

Costs

Note that the cost is per MB (rounded upwards) and by email. In other words, two emails with 400KB each, costs USD$1.98 in total. But a single email with two attachments of 400KB each, for a total of 800KB for that mail still costs USD$0.99.

Note that it is possible to convert .ePub and .PDF files on the Kindle 2 itself using a program called Savory. The files can be downloaded via the built-in Kindle browser and are then converted on the fly.

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