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Question of the week: do you want a Kindle and what should I read on my holiday?

 

So lovely wife bought me a Kindle for Christmas. Ain’t she lovely? Now we could argue a lot about the merits of Amazon’s eBook reader: a lot of people are dubious about them at first, but I love mine and once I’ve shown them how it works, what it’s like to read with, the free/cheap books you can get for it, etc, they generally end up wanting/buying one.

So part one of this week’s question is:

Do you want/have a Kindle? If not, why not?

However, an often overlooked advantage of the Kindle is that when it comes to going on holiday, it’s a revolution. We normally take about an entire suitcase full of books with us, most of which we end up leaving behind at a book exchange. We end up having to weigh all our suitcases very carefully before we go to make sure the books are all evenly distributed so we don’t go over our weight allowance.

Take a couple of Kindles and their battery chargers, though, and you’re pretty much sorted, since it weighs about a quarter of a kilo (half a pound) and can fit 3,000+ books in its memory. Woo hoo!

However, you do need ebooks for it and while I’ve got a lovely supply of free eBooks, I would like some more things to read when I’m on holiday next week. So part 2 of this week’s question is:

Are there any books you’d recommend for holiday reading, preferably available on the Kindle?

As always, leave a comment with your answer or a link to your answer on your own blog

Film

Question of the week: is iTunes’ TV and film pricing mental?

Community

So, I have a little idea at the weekend. Why don’t I get nice, HD quality episodes of Community? Got them already but not in HD, so I should show the love, shouldn’t I?

Of course, Community is only available on import DVD box set in the UK and not on Blu-Ray at all, so that means turning to the iTunes Store. You want to have a guess how much the entire first season of Community costs in HD on the iTunes Store?

Go on. A season of Heroes on Blu-Ray costs £35 and that’s 1080p, not 720p like on the iTunes Store. So how much do you reckon?

£62.25. I kid you not.

Now I love Community. I’m one of its biggest evangelists. But £62.25? FRO.

Now, this isn’t the only act of heinousness in terms of pricing on the iTunes Store in the UK, particularly when it comes to HD. Renting a HD movie costs £4.99. When you can buy a HD movie at all, you’re looking at £12.99. A little cheaper than Blu-Ray, but when you consider you don’t get many extras in those iTunes Extras and the resolution is lower than Blu-Ray, that’s not great.

Now let’s turn our attention to SD. You want to buy an entire season of Wonder Woman on DVD? Yes, Wonder Woman. That’ll be £30.99 – reduced to £5.99 on Amazon. That’s about right, huh? How much on iTunes? £19.99. Ouch. Yes, you’re spared the inconvenience of storage and having to wait a day or two (okay, a fortnight by Royal Mail at the moment), but £14’s worth of inconvenience? I can wait.

So this week’s question is:

Is iTunes pricing mental? Are the TV companies and Apple in a fairyworld of their own devising if they think people should be paying these kinds of prices? Or are they actually reasonable prices for what’s being offered?

As always, leave a comment with your answer or a link to your answer on your own blog