
Only a true icon makes every other product in its category seem chintzy and dated, if not totally obsolete. With its stylish design, slim profile (0.36 inch), and faster page-flips, the second coming of the Kindle is not only cooler and more portable, it's just plain better than anything else in its class. The improved graphics with eye-friendly e-ink display (16 shades of gray at 600 x 800 resolution) complete the package, offering an experience outdone only by a physical book — except with the Kindle, you're toting 1,500 of them. The end.
The most notable feature of the Kindle 2 (Amazon.com's long-awaited update to its groundbreaking but somewhat flawed electronic reading device) is that it's possible to pick it up and not turn the page. This sounds like faint praise, but anyone using the original Kindle quickly found that the oversized buttons covering both sides of the device made grasping it a delicate, stressful task – kind of like picking up a sea urchin. Anything less than perfect finger placement would lose your place.
Not so with the Kindle 2, which fixes that problem and a host of others through thoughtful, businesslike improvements and innovations.
Are the improvements big enough for the Kindle 2 to spark an iPod effect, causing bookstores to shutter, forests to grow unchecked, and the tomes on our shelves to disappear, replaced by plants and bobble-head dolls? Not any time soon.
The evolution toward e-reading devices as the dominant means of reading books will be a drawn-out and complicated affair. It will require screen technology with inexpensive, high-resolution color, multitouch and flexible displays. These are all features that the Kindle, as well as competitors like the Sony eReader, are still waiting for. A mass-market solution will also involve pricing that acknowledges how much cheaper it is to distribute books digitally; currently Amazon sells e-books for about half the price of their hardcover equivalents. But for now, the Kindle 2 is the closest thing to this magic formula.
The Kindle 2's page-turning buttons are smaller and more smartly situated than the first version's. It's harder to press them by mistake. In fact, by requiring you to depress them with authority, they're a little too hard to press – it would be nice if the reader could adjust the action a little. But overall, it's a problem solved.



