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4.6 out of 5 stars

Amazon Kindle Signature Edition (32 GB)

$113.99
$189.99 40% off Reference Price
Condition: New
Color: Agave Green
Screen Size: 6.8"
Style: Without Kindle Unlimited
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Top positive review
462 people found this helpful
Practically Perfect
By Eclectic Reader on Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2023
As you probably know, the kindle paperwhite is black and white and is used as a dedicated e-reader for books and other reading material. I've happily worn out several generations of kindle paperwhites because I read so many books, and I've given away about a dozen (new) kindles as presents over the years. The idea of within a minute retrieving any book in my library or getting a brand new book is simply irresistible. The kindle paperwhite is a great e-reader. Note that it frequently goes on sale so try to time your purchase so you can save $$. These are the things I like about it: * PORTABLE The kindle paperwhite is light and fits easily into my purse, even with a cover. By the way if you get a kindle definitely get a cover as well to protect it. There are many attractive ones besides just the official amazon covers. Or if you can live without the Signature edition, to save a little $$ buy the kids paperwhite kindle which comes with a case. (This is the exact same device as the regular kindle paperwhite -- just navigate out of the kids section on the device and don't forget to d/c the kids subscription). * WATERPROOF The kindle paperwhite is waterproof. Indispensable for the pool or bathtub. * EASY ON THE EYES The screen lighting of the kindle paperwhite is adjustable and reading is pleasant. I prefer to read with black background and white letters. (Settings > Accessibility > Invert Black and White). You can change the brightness by swiping down from the top and finding the "Brightness" setting. And don't forget you can change font and text size as well. When your book is open simply touch the top of the screen, select Aa > Font then adjust as you want. * READ TO YOU EVEN IF YOU DON'T USE AUDIBLE The kindle paperwhite reads to you even if you don't have audible books, alexa, or a phone app. Simply connect your bluetooth device to the kindle (Settings > Wi-Fi & Bluetooth > enable Bluetooth > select your device) then turn it on (Settings > Accessibility > VoiceView Screen Reader). You can adjust the volume and speech rate to your liking. * WIRELESS CHARGING -- SIGNATURE The Signature edition kindle paperwhite can be charged on your standard wireless phone charger. I turn the kindle upside down so the indicator lights are visible. EXTRA SPACE FOR AUDIBLE BOOKS -- SIGNATURE The standard kindle paperwhite has 8 GB storage which can store at least 2000 or 3000 ebooks or roughly 35 audible books. Newer kindle paperwhites have 16 GB. However the Signature kindle paperwhite has 32 GB which can store close to 160 audible books. (These numbers are from a quick browser search). Personally I like the text to speech feature on the kindle rather than subscribing to audible books since it's $$, but I use that extra space on the Signature to store other computer files that I don't want to lose. (You just attach the device to your computer and move files manually). _____ These are three things I don't like about the paperwhite software: * NO GAMES I really really miss the games. These were so fun to play for me and to entertain young ones. Please can we bring supportive software for games back? * KINDLE DEVICE HOME AND LIBRARY SCREENS Oh my gosh finding books is so confusing! Home lists books in order of last opened and while Library can be listed by title or author (three lines at top right screen give you "Sort by" screen), I find that if I don't remove books after I've read them things go berzerk. I hate having to scroll through long bars to find something. * COLLECTIONS IN AMAZON CLOUD Organizing books in the Amazon cloud is abysmal since you have only one layer of folders. If you have, say, science fiction books and mysteries, you either jumble them together in "Fiction" or else you have to make two separate folders that don't link. Please, Amazon, fix this. _____ Overall while the kindle paperwhite isn't *perfect* it's pretty darn close and lovely to read for books with plain text and even black and white images. PDFs and more complex images are difficult to see on the small screen and may do better with the Kindle Scribe which is larger. The kindle paperwhite and kindle paperwhite Signature is a great device for what it is meant to do -- read books -- and for that I will give five stars, although I am keeping my fingers crossed for software updates to make the experience even better.
Top critical review
63 people found this helpful
Something about battery life
By Daniel on Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2024
The biggest features for me were 1 dark mode for evening reading (software feature) - A 2 blue light adjustments (software feature) - A 3 better font fidelity with 300x300 (software feature) - B 3a better touch intelligence preventing accidental page turns (software feature) - C 4 audio transcriptions (software feature) - F 5 manual/auto adjusting light (software/hardware feature) - A 6 larger screen - A 7 battery life - F Lesser features for me were 1 inductive charging - A 2 water resistant up to so many feet for so many hours - A 3 32gb storage - A Worst features (described over first paragraph) 1 pricing schema between the paperwhites - C 2 color options - C Unadvertised features 1 interface seemingly inspired by libby - A Apologies ahead of time for the wall of text but there is alot to cover. Why I chose the Signature edition versus the lower priced model is the horrible pricing schema for the paperwhite line. Yes, they are fifty dollars separate in price so I looked into why. First, the base model only has eight gigs of storage (a shocking amount for the price point). The normal kindle has twice the space and priced below a hundred dollars. So I started playing with the options. They don't specify, up front, that the base model is sponsored. Removing advertisements and the price increases by twenty dollars. Since the signature version doesn't have a sponsored version, this is the true price difference. Doubling the storage aligns it with the base model kindle and adds a colored rubber option for the plastic back plate - now a twenty dollars difference. I wanted the blue rubber, which they call denim (lol I mean come on). But whatever. At this point, it was more-or-less a simple decision. For a twenty dollar upgrade, you get double storage and inductive charging. Neither was a big selling point, but, it provided more bang for the buck. Eight gigabytes of storage equated to a ten dollar increase. Sixteen gigabytes is twenty. The inductive charging coil is a free throw in. I'll take it. At the end of the day, the books I read are all from the library. I haven't bought an ebook in years. I consider this an investment since I don't have to drive to the library for a pick up and return. I won't need to pay late fees (I'm horrible about timely returns and renewals). Reading is also far more enjoyable since I don't have the hand cramps from holding a paperback open. I can be in my dark living room because it turned nightfall as I read and simply adjusted the lighting on the device to keep reading. So, onto my review. Regarding the software features listed as 1, 2, 3(a), 4, 5, 6, 7 1. Dark mode was one of the strongest selling points. Even though it is a software driven feature, it's hard to pass up the extra comfort for evening reading. My tablets and home comupter are all dark themed for this reason. 2. The blue light adjustment is also a permanent setting for me. Blue light is literally destructive on the eyes and should ultimately be banished from all tech. At least, now, we can adjust the lighting. Big plus there. 3. Font fidelity is too good. Previous models had a lower font count resulting in an experience that felt more 'paper-like,' if you will. Fonts on paperback novels are low fidelity as they are, and the previous e-ink displays seemed more realistic. If a software patch lowered the font count for reading, I'd take it. 3a. The detection of false touches on the screen to prevent accidental page turns doesn't seem to work. In most cases, the header and footer of the reading interface pops up when accidently touching the screen. In this case, the page isn't turned, but it still changes the 'view' of the page requiring another tap to restore. If I hold it by the side bezel, a roll of the finger toward the edge of the screen will turn the page every time. This is really annoying. 4. Attempted audio transcription in the accessibility section. It's a bad feature. If you want it to read your book, it mispronounces many words and I'm thinking 'what did it just say?' Any slight touch on the screen will disrupt the reading, it'll state the word it thinks you touched, then nothing. It won't continue reading the book until you go back a page, then return. Then it begins reading from the top all over again. Aggravating. If you decide to use this feature while driving, stuff it in a glove compartment and don't look back. I can't even see how this could be a feature for blind users. The interface isn't meant for the visually challenged because it isn't very intuitive for those purposes. It's a smooth touchscreen with zero tactile feedback. 5. Manual light adjustment, naturally, is a great feature. They've had it ever since front lit displays were annouced. Fair enough. The autoadjustment, though, is aggravating. For me, I want no light if it's a bright room. And my eyes are unique to me, and the auto adjustment doesn't get it right. So, this feature is more fluff than anything. They could've saved three cents on the sensor and skipped the feature altogether. 6. Larger screen, is always good, enough said. 7. One selling point was the advertised battery life. Upon receiving the device, I put it straight on the charger for the initial fill up. Charged it to hundred-percent before activating it. As my usual routine with Kindle, i lowered the light to lowest setting and downloaded my reading list. Promptly turned airplane mode and proceeded to read. In the first twenty hours, the device was already at eighty-two percent battery. The time block included an eight hour sleeping period with the device in low-power mode. I may have spent three hours reading a book in this time period and the battery was already at ninety-two percent. At this rate, the device would need a charge in less than a week - far less than the 'up to ten weeks battery life.' This is now, more or less, a gimmick the way I see it. I'm sure ten-weeks means that the device is completely off and sitting on a shelf. As a comparison, my fifth-generation kindle paperwhite battery lasted at least six weeks when it was new and really only replaced it now because the battery lasts about thirty-six hours between charges. They also stopped pushing software updates years ago, god only knows why. The browser was still experimental and it struggled to display the kindle store as it was. The truth is, Amazon doesn't support their devices beyond three years, even with minor software releases. The platform should've improved on battery consumption. In reality, it's better than normal phone/tablets with battery performance, but not drastically so. Not like before. If I take this thing on my next vacation, the charger will be required. Regarding 1, 2, 3 1. I figured the inductive charging coil was more-or-less a gimmick. An ancient and ultra-inexpensive feature to implement on devices meant to provide marketing buzz in most cases. The truth is, this device will need to be charged FAR more often than advertised. And the wear and tear of the internal charging port would eventually lead to water infiltration if you read near a swimming pool, hot tub, the beach, or in the rain. 2. Leading to the water resistant 'feature.' I can picture a situations where a wife asks the husband 'honey, have you seen my kindle?' Husband responds 'yeah it's on the bottom of the pool.' This helps the community of users who stupidly bring their devices to the toilet and prone to dropping them into the waste water. God knows it's happened to me when checking my texts after a few cocktails. Yes I've been guilty of this in the past. And yes, I still bring my kindle into the bathroom to read while doing number two. 3. Storage, it is what it is. I don't consume many audio books, and this storage is really featured for that. Though, the storage is sufficient in holding large files. Large enough to store movie files. Regarding 1 1. The interface does seem inspired by the libby app. If I want to look at my 'send to kindle' web pages, then I can 'filter' the view on documents. I can 'filter' by the books I've only downloaded, and so on. I've grown accustomed to this view and it is welcome on the kindle. If I want to hit the brewery for a few pints, I'll spend ten minutes filtering through all my preferred new sites, i'll send to kindle the headlines that seem interesting, then take it with me. A distraction free device for reading news while drinking a few pints. This is nothing new but the filter feature makes it really nice.

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