While Reading My Kindle In The Bath... By Susan Price
Or, Kindle Tutorial No. 1
My Kindle in its macintosh |
Calloo callay oh frabjous day! I can now read my kindle in
the bath.
The only fault I found with my Kindle was that I dared not
read it in the bath – and, when feeling especially tired, I like to spend a couple
of hours in hot water, with a tot of single malt, and a good book.
But now almost all my reading is done on the Kindle, I have
to switch off my current book and exchange it for a paper one that will survive
a bath – not ideal when you’re in the middle of something gripping.
And then I spotted this plastic bag… To be fair, it is a bit more than a plastic
bag. It has a waterproof seal, rather
like those on re-sealable food bags, but tripled. Those triple seals fold over and are fastened
down with press-studs. The kindle can be
read and operated through the plastic.
There is also this more expensive version from Lakeland,
which has a floating cushion, so your kindle can bask on its own lilo. We are sternly warned that these
‘splash-proof’ covers are not for
underwater use – so do not try this while scuba-diving. However, it’s more than sufficient to save
your e-reader from a dunk in the tub.
My Kindle in its usual red leather jacket. And sunnies |
Having solved your Kindle-bathwater interaction problems, I
thought I’d use the rest of this post for a Kindle tutorial. This may bring the words ‘eggs’ and ‘granny’
to your mind, but I’ve been struck by how little many Kindle owners know about
the Kindle.
When non-owners accost me in
cafes and pubs to ask me how it works, that’s one thing – but I was recently at
a gathering of Kindle-owning writers, and found myself conducting an impromptu
class, not on formatting work for the Kindle, but on the basics of using the thing,
such as how to change the font size.
“Can you make yours talk?” they said. “How do you do it?”
Here, then, are some FAQs and their answers. I begin with the absolute basics, for absolute beginners. (The rest of you, get on with your work quietly.)
Kindle keyboard - square touchpad to the right |
How do I download books?
Is it easy? – There are two ways.
If your Kindle has wi-fi, you click on ‘Menu’ (above the square
touch-pad) and it will offer you ‘Shop in Kindle Store’ (second choice down, on the left.)
The 'Menu menu' |
Click to this, using the edges of the square
touch-pad, and select it by clicking the pad’s centre square. (Clicking on the square's left edge will move the cursor to the left; clicking on the lower edge will move it down, and so on.)
Your Kindle will
connect to the Amazon Kindle Store. You
can either browse, navigating via the Kindle’s small touch-pad and the page-turning buttons, or you can use
the keyboard to type in a title or author.
Click ‘Buy’ and the book downloads to your Kindle in
seconds. (If you buy by accident, which is easily done, you
can unbuy immediately, so no worries.)
Varney on the job |
If your Kindle doesn’t have wi-fi, go to Amazon on your
computer. They will send you an email in
confirmation of your purchase, with a link from which you can download the book
to your computer desktop. Connect your Kindle
to your pc by a cable, and ‘drag and drop’ from one device to the other. (My brother tells me that he hasn’t yet
bought an e-book. As he’s into obscure
19th Century penny-dreadfuls, he downloads them, free, from
Project Gutenberg to his desktop, and drag-drops them to his Kindle. He then thrills to Varney the Vampyr on his
way to and from work.)
How do I change the size of the print? If you have a keyboard Kindle, like mine,
squint at the keyboard until you find the Aa button (to the right of the little
spacebar.) This brings up a menu. Along the top line Aa is repeated in various
sizes. Move the cursor (using the sides
of the square touch-pad) until it underlines the size you want. Click the centre of the square, and the print-size
will change.
The 'Aa menu' |
The Aa key’s menu also offers you a choice of typeface
(regular, condensed or sans serif), line-spacing and words per line. Select them in the same way.
How do I get my kindle to talk to me? – Use the same Aa menu. Almost at the bottom, it offers ‘Text to
speech’. Move down to it using the edges
of the square, choose it by clicking on the square, and Kindle will read aloud
whatever is on the screen. In this mode, it also turns
its own pages, and can be paused. I’ve just had mine read me a
couple of pages of Walter Scott in a woman’s voice with a faint American accent. Amazon call this feature ‘experimental’, and
doubtless it will improve.
You can also put Audio Books on the Kindle, and play them through it.
How do I change the screen orientation? - Right at the
bottom of the Aa menu is ‘Screen Rotation.’
Small illustrations offer 4 ways of using the kindle – with the keyboard
at the top, at the bottom, to the left or right. As before, click down to this choice, click
along to choose the one you want, and click the centre of the square. I have found that I much prefer reading in
landscape or letter-box format, with the keyboard to the right. – but choose
the way that best suits you.
To get rid of the Aa menu, either click the Aa again, or
press ‘Back’ (beneath the square touchpad).
‘Back’ is useful, as it will return you to where you were, no matter
what buttons you’ve been playing about with.
I’m out of space, but I’ve more to tell, so, next month,
Part 2! - Which will be a little more advanced.
Artwork: Andrew Price |
Susan Price's latest e-books are:
and
Artwork: Andrew Price |
Susan Price also blogs here
Her website is here
Comments
I love the text-to-speech. When I'm reading in bed, or reading while eating and don't have a hand free to turn the "pages", I turn it on so it reads to me. I like the female voice for some texts and the male for others. Next time I do a school visit with Year 9's on a Friday afternoon, I'm just going to turn on my Kindle text-to-speech reading my latest book, hand it to the teacher, and go for a cup of tea...
I've never dropped the kindle in a bath because I've never dared take it anywhere near one. But I shall test its new macintosh asap.