Saturday, July 11, 2015

Amazon’s new Kindle Paperwhite Review: Great e-reader, awesome font – Mashable

Amazon’s new Kindle Paperwhite is the now best e-reader on the market, a feat it accomplished with just two updates Essentially: a high-resolution new screen and a new font

It’s true:. Amazon’s thinner, lighter Kindle Voyage has more bells and whistles, like an adaptive light, pressure sensitive bevels and haptic feedback, but it costs almost $ 100 Also more. At $ 119 (for the Wi-Fi-only model), the new Kindle Paperwhite hits the sweet spot for price and performance.

If you read my original Kindle Paperwhite review, you already know a lot about it . The 7.2 ounce, 9.1 mm thick device has a 6-inch touch screen, built-in lighting screen, a single button for power / sleep and a Micro USB port for charging and side-loading content.

Of course there are differences. On the outside of Amazon’s new e-reader, the Kindle logo on the front is now more stealthy – black instead of silver and on the back; and the larger, embossed logo Kindle Has Been Replaced with an Amazon logo.

More Significantly, the new Paperwhite’s screen is now the high-contrast same, 300 pixels per inch (PPI) marvel you’ll find on the much more expensive Kindle Voyage . The imagery is sharper and perhaps a bit more paper-like, and it’s much more responsive than last year’s Paperwhite.

For example, When I use Amazon’s Paper Flip, Which you access by touching the top of the screen and Then selecting an area at the bottom to drag the slider and skim quickly through pages, the animation on screen is much, much smoother. On the old Paperwhite, the action was jerky and kind of useless for navigating lengthy tomes.



What’s in a font

KindlePaperwhiteNewvsOld

On the left is the new Amazon Kindle Paperwhite with its 300 ppi screen and new font. On the right is the original Paperwhite and the old default font reading

Image:. Mashable, Lance Ulanoff

I have to admit, I was somewhat skeptical When Amazon said the other big change coming to the Paperwhite (and soon all other Kindles) was a new font called Bookerly.

I know que fonts matter. They impact readability, emotions, your job prospects, and even your grades, but how much of a difference Could a custom font make on an e-ink-based digital e-reader, even one with a 300 PPI screen?

As it turns out, the answer is a lot.

I’ve spent the last two weeks reading books and magazines on the new Kindle Paperwhite and, to be honest, I’m in love with this font.

showme-bookerly2

A look at what makes Amazon’s Bookerly so readable.

Amazon Told Mashable that it spent two years working with a team of experts designing the serif typography Bookerly. It’s the first custom font designed for the digital reader and replaces the default Caecilia the Kindle font. Users can switch back if They Do not like Bookerly, but I can not see why anyone would want to.

The company’s efforts to fine tune every aspect of Bookerly, including ascenders, descenders, and the serifs character openings, is evident. At virtually any size (it’s easy to change font-sizes on the Kindle using the familiar pinch to zoom motion), Bookerly is one of the most readable fonts I’ve ever encountered.



Reading is fundamental still

Obviously, you can buy the tablet from Amazon, Apple, Samsung and other manufacturers and read books on a backlit screen, but the experience will not be the same. The light que tablets emit Also is ruining your sleep.

E-readers que use e-ink are still the closest thing you’ll find in the digital realm to paper and, like other e-readers before it , Amazon Kindle Paperwhite beats Those backlit battery life on tablets by a country mile. I charged the Paperwhite before a two-week vacation and did not have to recharge it until I got back into the office (it’s recharging as I write this).

You can find cheaper e-readers, even from Amazon, Which sells its baseline Kindle for $ 79, but Then you’ll miss out on the best e-reader screen on the market and, though you will have access to Bookerly, it will not look as good as it does on the new Paperwhite.

Amazon Kindle Paperwhite

The Good

Great, screen high-res Fantastic new font Excellent battery life Tons of storage Easy to use Affordable

The Bad

Ad-free version costs an extra $ 20

The Bottom Line

The Amazon Kindle Paperwhite (2015) is a pure joy to use and hits the sweet spot in price and e-reading performance.

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