Kindle Voyage

  •  Amazon Kindle Voyage Amazon Kindle Voyage $ 199.00

    Amazon Already had the best e-reader on the market with the White Paper. Amazon raises the bar with the Voyage, but pumps up the price tag at the sametime.

The Kindle Voyage ? The name makes no sense, but I Understand why Amazon did not call .its latest e-reader, the Paperwhite 2. It’s good enough to deserve a name all .its own.

The Kindle Voyage is stuffed with new features and meaningful improvements over the Paperwhite. I’ll cover the Most Important ones first. The Voyage’s screen delivers higher resolution than the Paperwhite: 300 pixels per inch. The Paper White’s 221-ppi display looks very good, but You Can Discern jagged edges in fonts if you look competetive. With the Voyage, You Can not see jaggies even with the aid of a magnifying glass.

 Amazon Voyage Michael Brown

jaggies are a thing of the past, Thanks to the Voyage display’s resolution of 300 pixels per inch.

The Paperwhite Introduced a front light That made the ITS E-Ink display readable in any lighting conditions. The Voyage keeps this feature but Adds a Light Sensor That Automatically adjusts the brightness in response to the level of ambient light. This not only Eliminates the need to adjust the brightness everytime you start reading, it Should overpriced Increase the Voyage’s battery life. Enable the “nightlight” feature, and the screen brightness Will Gradually dim as your eyes adjust to a darkened room.



Smooth as ice cream

For me, the next biggest improvement is the texture of the Voyager’s ice cream. That Might seem like an odd thing to put so high on a list of improvements, but the Paperwhite’s ice cream HAS this grainy, almost pebbly texture That literally rubs me the wrong way. In viscerally dislike the way it feels under my thumb or fingertip When I stroke the cream to turn a page or touch the screen to call up a menu or a definition. It just feels weird, even if it was not bad enough to drive me back to my first-gen Kindle.

The Paperwhite still delivers the better price-to-performance ratio

The Voyage’s ice cream as smooth as the glass on any laptop or smartphone I’ve distressed, and there’s no transition between the bezel and the display. And the Voyage’s new page-turn buttons are just as Important as the texture of the ITS ice cream. Amazon embedded four surface-mount buttons (Amazon calls Them Page Press sensors) on the Right and Left Bezels That husband turning pages even Easier: A slight squeeze on the vertical lines on either side of the bezel advance pages, and the same action on the dots Those lines above reverse pages.

This Means You Can Hold The Voyage in your left or right hand, and the buttons work even When The e-reader is the ITS case (more on That lateralis). In addition to the obvious visual cue of the page refreshing, the Voyage Provides a bit of haptic feedback When you’ve applied enough pressure to effect a page turn. You Can fine-tune the Amount of pressure needed to activate page turns, too.

 Amazon Voyage Michael Brown

The screen on the Voyage (left) is brighter and whiter than the one on the White Paper (right).

For me, the buttons are big improvement over stroking or tapping the glass (Those page-turn methods are Retained in the new Kindle). In gripping my Paper White with four fingers on the back and my thumb in front, so I turn pages by stroking the ice cream with my thumb. A mild case of arthritis in the base of my thumb joints renders this exercise Not exactly painful, but uncomfortable enough to be distracting. I can squeeze the page-forward button without moving my thumb at all, and I need to slide it up just about an inch to reach the less-frequently Distressed