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		<title>Amazon's Kindle 2 Improves the Good, Leaves Out the Bad</title>
		<link>http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20090225/amazons-kindle-2-improves-the-good-leaves-out-the-bad/</link>
		<comments>http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20090225/amazons-kindle-2-improves-the-good-leaves-out-the-bad/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Feb 2009 02:02:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Walter S. Mossberg</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20090225/amazons-kindle-2-improves-the-good-leaves-out-the-bad/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Walt finds that Amazon.com has fixed the worst design flaws in the Kindle, its popular electronic-book reader, while maintaining the excellent book-buying experience that made the first model tolerable despite those problems.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href='http://online.wsj.com/quotes/main.html?type=djn&#038;symbol=amzn'>Amazon.com</a> has fixed the worst design flaws in the Kindle, its popular electronic-book reader, while maintaining the excellent book-buying experience that made the first Kindle model tolerable despite those problems.</p>
<p>This week, the company released the Kindle 2, a new version that is much thinner, a tad lighter and a bit taller. It has much more built-in memory, better navigation controls and a slightly improved screen. I&#8217;ve been testing the Kindle 2 for a few weeks and consider it a vast improvement over the first Kindle, released in late 2007, which was clumsy and annoying to use. Overall, I found the Kindle 2 to be a well-designed, satisfying piece of hardware.</p>
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<p>The new model carries the same relatively high $359 price tag as its predecessor, but it offers faster page rendering and 25% better battery life. The catalog of books available on both Kindles has now swelled from about 90,000 in 2007 to over 230,000 today, and titles still typically cost around $10. You can still subscribe to periodicals and blogs, and there is still a crude Web browser built in &#8212; but this gadget is mainly for reading books.</p>
<p>Like its predecessor, the new Kindle has a built-in cellular wireless modem that allows you to download books or update periodicals on the fly, without using a computer. As before, there is no monthly fee for this wireless service.</p>
<p>Most important, Amazon (AMZN) has remedied the most irritating flaws of the original model. It&#8217;s no longer easy to accidentally turn pages, because the page-turning buttons have been redesigned. You no longer have to reach around to the back of the device to turn it on or off. You no longer scroll through menus and text with an odd little wheel whose progress was only visible in a thermometer-like strip separate from the main window. And the book-like cover no longer falls off.</p>
<p>But the improvements in this dedicated e-book reader, while admirable, may pale beside Amazon&#8217;s next move. Amazon says it is working to make the Kindle e-book catalog available on other mobile devices, such as smart phones, that people already own. The online merchant, which is so secretive it makes Steve Jobs seem like Joe Biden, isn&#8217;t saying which devices will get the Kindle service or when. I would bet it will be sooner rather than later.</p>
<div class="media-CENTER" style="width: 262px;"><img src="http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/images/PJ-AO532_pjPTEC_DV_20090225150328.jpg" alt="Kindle 2" height="394" width="262" /><br />Amazon&#8217;s Kindle 2</div>
<p>This makes perfect sense. While the Kindle project has often been compared with Apple&#8217;s iPod, because both are hardware devices seamlessly connected to online-content stores, there is a fundamental difference. Apple (AAPL) offers content to sell hardware. Amazon offers the Kindle to sell content.</p>
<p>If, say, this electronic content were available not only on the Kindle reader, but via Kindle software apps on Apple&#8217;s iPhone or the BlackBerry, the e-book market could explode.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Kindle&#8217;s design has gone from chunky and clunky to smooth and sleek. The power switch is now easily reachable on top of the device, and the all-important buttons for paging forward and backward through a book are now smaller &#8212; and work by pushing them firmly inward toward the screen instead of outward toward the edge of the device. This means they can no longer be easily activated by stray finger movements.</p>
<p>The weird thermometer system has been replaced by a little joystick that moves an on-screen cursor. The Home button is now large, and has been moved off the keyboard, which has been reduced in size, but is still quite usable.</p>
<p>The screen is the same 6-inch, high-resolution E-Ink display, which has a comforting contrast ratio for reading and uses battery power only when you turn the page. But, while it still can&#8217;t display color and still can&#8217;t be read in the dark, its gray-shade graphics are much more detailed.</p>
<p>The battery is now sealed in, but it is larger. Amazon claims you can read for four or five days with the wireless turned on, or up to two weeks with it turned off. In my tests, those claims proved true. I took the Kindle on a trip for a week with the wireless turned off and the battery indicator barely budged.</p>
<p>Memory has been greatly expanded, so you can store 1,500 books, up from 200, though you can no longer add extra memory.</p>
<p>There are also a few cool new features. The Kindle 2 looks up words in the dictionary automatically, as soon as you move the cursor to them. It can optionally read books aloud in a computer voice that&#8217;s surprisingly decent. And, if the wireless function is on, the Kindle service will remember the last page you read in a book and synchronize a second Kindle to that same place in the book.</p>
<p>There are some drawbacks. You still can&#8217;t organize your books into groups of your choice. Amazon now charges $29 for the cover, which was formerly free. And the Kindle still doesn&#8217;t work with some of the open e-book formats that other devices support.</p>
<p>But for serious book readers who are tired of toting around stacks of books and periodicals, the new Kindle is finally a pleasure to use.</p>
<p><em>Find all of Walt Mossberg&#8217;s columns and videos online, free, at the All Things Digital Web site, <a href="http://www.walt.allthingsd.com" rel="external">walt.allthingsd.com</a>. Email him at <a href="mailto:mossberg@wsj.com" rel="external">mossberg@wsj.com</a>.</em></p>
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		<title>New Office for Macs Speeds Up Programs, Integrates Formats</title>
		<link>http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20080103/new-office-for-macs-speeds-up-programs-integrates-formats/</link>
		<comments>http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20080103/new-office-for-macs-speeds-up-programs-integrates-formats/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jan 2008 00:01:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Walter S. Mossberg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Apple]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20080103/new-office-for-macs-speeds-up-programs-integrates-formats/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The new Microsoft Office for the Mac isn't revolutionary, but it's a solid program that does its job faster than old versions, Walt says.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Despite the fierce rivalry between <a href='http://online.wsj.com/quotes/main.html?type=djn&#038;symbol=msft'>Microsoft</a> and Apple, there is one product on which the two companies work closely together: the Macintosh version of Microsoft Office. Microsoft makes a nice chunk of change from this software suite, which includes Mac versions of the famous Word, Excel and PowerPoint programs. Apple needs the Microsoft office suite so its Macintosh computers can live in harmony with the dominant Windows world.</p>
<p>On Jan. 15, Microsoft will be releasing its first new version of Office for the Mac in nearly four years. It is called Office 2008, and it has two big changes from the current version, Office 2004.</p>
<p>For one, it is the first edition of Mac Office designed specifically for the new Intel-based Macs that Apple began rolling out two years ago. While the old Office ran adequately on the new Macs, it was slow to launch and slow to perform certain operations.</p>
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<p>Second, the new Mac Office now reads and writes a new set of file formats Microsoft introduced a year ago in the latest Windows version of Office, called Office 2007. Mac owners receiving files in these new formats had been forced to employ separate and clumsy file converter programs.</p>
<p>Now, once again, the Mac version of Office can handle all the same Word, Excel and PowerPoint files &#8212; in both old and new formats &#8212; created in Windows and vice versa. No translation or conversion is necessary. The files just open and save as they do in the Windows version.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been testing the new Mac Office on two different Intel-based Macs: an early MacBook Pro laptop and a new iMac desktop. On both machines, Office 2008 launched and ran far more rapidly and smoothly than Office 2004 did.</p>
<p>I also tested Office 2008 with a variety of documents created in the Windows version using the new file formats, which can be identified by four-letter file name extensions that end in the letter &#8220;x.&#8221; All opened rapidly and perfectly in the new Mac version.</p>
<p>As in the latest Windows version, the new Mac Office 2008 allows you to opt to continue to save automatically all your files in the old, familiar formats-DOC for Word, XLS for Excel and PPT for PowerPoint. But, if you want to switch to the new formats, or need to use a file you receive that was created in them, you can now do so with ease.</p>
<p>Like its predecessors, the new Mac Office differs in one major respect from its Windows cousin: It lacks Outlook, the famed, if bloated, program for handling email, calendar and contacts. Instead, Office 2008 has a new version of Microsoft&#8217;s Mac counterpart to Outlook, called Entourage, which performs the same tasks but doesn&#8217;t use Outlook&#8217;s file format. Like Outlook, Entourage can work with the Microsoft Exchange servers used by corporations, as well as with consumer email systems.</p>
<p>Office 2008 for the Mac has some new features, but it isn&#8217;t nearly as radical an overhaul as the latest Windows version was. While the latter junked all the menus and traditional toolbars in Word, Excel and PowerPoint, the new Mac version retains the familiar menus and toolbars. It doesn&#8217;t use the so-called Ribbon, a band of icons that is the signature feature of Windows Office 2007.</p>
<p>The new Mac Office, however, does include a new user-interface feature called the Elements Gallery, a narrow strip across the top of the document that lets you easily summon and insert canned features for laying out documents. For example, in Word, you can quickly insert a handsome cover page. In Excel, you can rapidly add a specific type of chart or a spreadsheet preconfigured, for instance, as an invoice. In PowerPoint, you can quickly add customized slide themes and layouts.</p>
<p>There is also a Publishing Layout View in Word that speeds the creation of things like newsletters, and a Ledger Sheet feature in Excel for creating home and small-business budgets.</p>
<p>In my tests, I ran into a few minor glitches. I had to edit my rules for sorting email in Entourage to get them to work and, at first, I was unable to add new spellings to my custom dictionary in Word, though that problem went away. But, generally, the program worked well.</p>
<p>The standard edition of the new Office costs $400, or $240 to upgrade your current version. There is a deluxe edition, which includes a professional media-management program, for $500, or an upgrade price of $300.</p>
<p>For most average users, however, I recommend the Home and Student edition for just $150 that can be legally installed on up to three different Macs. This inexpensive edition has full versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Entourage, but doesn&#8217;t work with Exchange servers.</p>
<p>Microsoft is also running a sale, through Jan. 14, under which anyone buying Office 2004 gets a coupon that allows them to receive the high-end version of Office 2008 for just a shipping and handling fee of $6.99.</p>
<p>Microsoft Office 2008 for the Mac is a solid program that I can recommend for anyone with a new Mac. It&#8217;s not revolutionary, but it does the job.</p>
<p>Email me at <a href="mailto:mossberg@wsj.com" rel="external">mossberg@wsj.com</a>. Find all my columns and videos online, free, at the new All Things Digital Web site, <a href="http://walt.allthingsd.com" rel="external">http://walt.allthingsd.com</a>.</p>
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