Archive for July 9, 2009

Amazon cuts price of its smaller Kindle

Kindle2-hand
Today, Amazon lowered the price of its Kindle 2 e-Book reader by $60.
[ Photo courtesy of Amazon.com ]

Amazon has moved to address what we’ve cited in the past as the biggest drawback to the company’s family of Kindle e-book readers: Their high prices. The company has dropped the $359 price of its flagship Kindle 2 by $60. However, the price of the newest and biggest Kindle, the DX, remains unchanged at $489.

At its new price of $299, the Kindle 2 now competes in price with the least-expensive e-book reader from Sony, Kindle’s closest rival. The Sony Reader 505 lists at $299, but is currently available for $279.99 from Sony and $268 from Amazon.

The Kindle 2 is now significantly less expensive than the newest Sony, the 700C, which is $349. This top-of-the-line Sony has a touchscreen and night LED lights, both features that the Kindles lack. However, the Kindles can receive content wirelessly, using the Sprint data network — and the price of the units in part reflect the cost of that access, which is free for the lifetime of the device. The Sonys require connection to a PC to receive content.—Paul Reynolds.

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First impressions: T-Mobile’s myTouch 3G smart phone

The new T-Mobile myTouch 3G smart phone, the second phone to use Google’s Android operating system, is promising in some ways. Yet my demo of the phone at press preview yesterday also revealed some drawbacks – some of them possible pre-release flaws that its manufacturer, HTC, is still troubleshooting.

Available in early August, and priced at $200 with a 2-year contract, the myTouch is noticeably smaller and lighter than its predecessor, the T-Mobile G1 – which will continue to be available from T-Mobile and is recommended in our Ratings, available to subscribers.

Here are my first impressions, based on the demo:

Display. The myTouch’s 3.2-in. touchscreen display (the same size as the one on the G1) seemed reasonably bright during the demo, if less sharp and bright that that of the best displays we’ve tested, like the iPhone’s. It also seemed less responsive than best touchscreens. Widgets, icons and other elements sometimes “snagged” when I tried to drag them across the screen. This may be a pre-release glitch.

Interface. As with most smart phones, you can customize myTouch’s menus, wallpapers, icons to suit your needs. And, as with the Palm Pre and phones that use the Windows Mobile OS, the myTouch lets you run multiple applications simultaneously. But jumping from one app to another, or shutting one down, is not as easy as on the Palm Pre. Where the Pre allows you to shuffle between apps, using card-like screen icons, the myTouch requires several key presses to change applications, or to shut them down.

Keyboard. Where the G1 had a slide-out QWERTY keyboard, the myTouch has a virtual keyboard. It seemed to work well, and when expanded to landscape mode, by tilting the phone, it displayed keys that could easily accommodate my chubby fingers. However, I found the keyboard didn’t always expand when tilted, which may also be a pre-release bug. The keyboard has vibration feedback and sound effects to simulate the feedback of a real keyboard, which are always welcome enhancements. Surprisingly, the default setting for both features is “off.”

The myTouch’s predictive-text feature shows you several possible word choices at the bottom of the screen as you type. On the iPhone and other phones with predictive text, you only get one word suggestion—and it’s often not the one you want. You can also teach the phone to recognize uncommon nouns, such “Pappageorgios.”

Searching. You can search the Web by just speaking out terms. Such searches consider your GPS location, to help find local restaurants and other merchants. There’s also a Sherpa shopping tool, with a search engine “learns” its user’s likes and dislikes when recommending retailers, restaurants, and other attractions; you rate these by clicking a “thumbs up” or “thumbs down” icon. But you can’t perform universal searches for contacts, applications and other items, as you can on the iPhones and Palm Pre.

Warranty. Few phones have a standard warranty that’s longer than a year, but the myTouch offers two years of standard coverage, which is a nice, er, touch.

I’ll have more details on the myTouch and the Android operating system – which has been upgraded — when we get it in our labs later this month.—Mike Gikas

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