Valmont wrote: » Additionally, there are so many good books, essays, articles, or out-of-print books that you cannot buy except at great expense; with the Kindle all you need to do is download the free (mostly) .EPUB files, convert them in Calibre and drag them onto your Kindle. This is how the Kindle has changed my reading habits; I read more essays, old books, and new works that may have been self-published.
Mars Bar wrote: » I'd love my Kindle more if there was the option to categorise books in folders
Outkast_IRE wrote: » There sort of is you can create collections, name them and place whatever books you want in that folder, that way on the homepage on the screen it displays folders/collections first then books that arent in collections
Mars Bar wrote: » On the Kindle Fire?
Candie wrote: » Strangely, I can organise books into collections on both the Kindle app on my tablet and on my Paperwhite, but not on my Kindle Fire. I'd advise anyone thinking of buying a Fire to consider another Android tablet instead; the Fire is just a shopfront for Amazon with many limitations and the Kindle android app is superior to the experience on the Fire as you can organise properly. For reading alone the Paperwhite is vastly superior to any tablet.
apieceofcake wrote: » Am thinking of getting a Kindle/e-reader at some stage, but the fact that you're looking at a screen is kinda off-putting. I work at a computer all day, so the last thing I want to do when I come home is to turn on another device for reading. Reading is what I do to relax and it doesn't sound very relaxing to be honest. However, the ease of access to new authors and new books immediately is very appealing.