Kindle Drm Remove

6
Aug/10
0

kindle drm remove

Entelligence: Two strikes Kindle is enough for me

Entelligence is a technology strategist at the spine and the author Michael Gartenberg a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a bagel in New York as it is eclipsed only by his passion for technology. In these articles, you'll find that our industry is and where it goes – in the micro and macro level – with the mind and a unique vision that only he can give.

I love books. No, I do love books. In almost every room of my house there are libraries that are full to overflowing. I want to buy, hold and read the words written to inform, delight and transport the reader at different times, new experiences, and shed one so I never could have imagined. As the hot dog eating and the worst beer drank, the worst book I read was wonderful … but the books are an inconvenience. They are bulky to store, difficult to travel with (the role is very, very heavy), and pocket books, in particular, tend not to do and over time. So in addition to books, I was a fan of electronic books. My old company capital risk is one of the first investments in the peanut press (long sold and resold several times and now the property Barnes and Noble) and more than a decade ago, I problems with the reading of fiction by Dan Brown in a Palm V with a low resolution and backlight. It was a struggle – but it was better than schlepping paper.

Efforts have been made a large number of e-book the last decade, but none were successful. Have been dedicated players like RocketBook and others. There have been efforts by Microsoft to create a market for electronic books for your mobile devices and Tablet PC, and Adobe's efforts to publish books with the ubiquitous PDF format. None has been successful – Until Amazon introduced the Kindle. Although it was far from perfect, I felt like I did for the Amazon e-book reader what Apple did with the PC. In the words Alan Kay, the Macintosh was the first PC good enough to be criticized. I felt the same way about the Kindle. The Kindle had enough content to be interesting – focuses in obtaining e-book price low (after all, what is the physical difference between the electronic version of a paperback book and is connected?) and wisely ignore the PC loading the content. The Kindle 2, Kindle DX, along with the desire to move to the Amazon Kindle on other platforms like the iPhone seemed to have the Kindle seems to have the best opportunity to make e-books in the mass market. However, two events in recent weeks have led to put the Kindle back on the shelf and I ask again if the market for electronic books will never take off.

Amazon states that "a copy of each book you bought at the store on Amazon.com Kindle is saved in case need to download again. Wireless can re-download books for free at any time. This allows you to make room for new titles in your Kindle, knowing that Amazon is storing your personal library staff Kindle books. Even save your last page read and annotations, so you never lose it, either. Think it as a shelf in your attic – even if you do not see, you know that your books are there. "

"The idea of a society to achieve my camera and I started removing content limits are exceeded, under any circumstances. "

Sounds good. Not very different eReader Policy, where I can download books that I bought there over ten years to my iPhone, a device that did not exist when I bought them. My problems came after download my copy of Freakonomics to my Kindle, my iPhone and iPod touch. I found I could not download the book to my Kindle 2. I continued to make errors error which simply says that this book can not be loaded for this device. Soon I found on Google was not alone. There seems to be a finite number of times each book can be downloaded, even if you download the device itself. This number is set by the publisher and varies from one book to another, but never spoke of the Amazon, and there is no indication anywhere in the process purchase. In short, it avoids the reason why one could buy an electronic book first. If I read Freakonomics at this time, I also must find a device I'm not using that has content in it or buy new copy. Sorry. It's just unacceptable and I talked about what books I buy in the future. This represented an increase last week.

More worrying for me was a story last week that customers who had bought copies (note the irony) to Rebellion Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four, has discovered their documents were taken from their lights, and Amazon was issuing refunds. However, these copies not allowed in the U.S., Amazon has no right to sell, so I'm not surprised that withdrew from the bank. But the idea of a society to achieve in my machine and remove put content in it is beyond the limits, in any case. Imagine Apple decided so that the music on your iPod was not there legitimately and remove it for you? (In fact, Apple has removed the content of their App Store as Tris, who has violated the licensing, but users who have downloaded the software your device can continue to use). Yes, Amazon goofed. He told the New York Times do not do it again. There are hundreds of different ways, could have managed that. At day's end, they decided not to do, and it is a difficult thing for me to get more.

Books are precious. Important. The books buy through years – the Jewish medieval treatises literary, techno thrillers and mysteries – are too precious for me to take the risk of He never closed the door of content that I own, or worse, that the contents removed at the discretion of an employee of the bookstore where I bought them. People have blamed to DRM, but it is a matter of digital rights management to me. I bought an Apple-protected content for years and have never had a problem of exclusion it. Similarly, people with eReader and Fictionwise. For now, I'm going back to paper, and when I e-book purchases will be for eReader (and now Barnes and Noble) I've never lost access to content that I own.

This is now two strikes from Amazon, and I'm not willing to wait to strike three of his outings. If the Kindle will really in the mass market, Amazon needs to rethink the way they are selling the content and under what conditions. China Mobile Phones Nokla Mobile Phones TV

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