vote up 7 vote down star
1

alt text

Now that the Amazon Kindle is available internationally, I'm considering getting one. There are plenty of reviews around the net, but what I want to ask here is whether this device is are suitable for reading programming reference books. I'd really appreciate the thoughts of anyone with experience of it.

  • Is the amount of text that can be shown on screen at once limiting?

  • Are source code listings a problem?

  • How easy is it to jump from place to place in a non-linear way as you do with a reference book?

  • Are the note taking and annotation features practical?

As far as my question goes:

I am interested in the standard Kindle currently being sold (the "Kindle 2") and not the "Kindle DX".

I would not use it for only programming books, but it would be a lot of money to spend on a device not suitable for them.

Assume that the books are available direct from Amazon, i.e. no messy file conversions needed.

flag

Putting "programming" in the question doesn't make it programming-related. Are you writing a kindle app? Are you preparing documents for a kindle? What programming are you doing? Where's the code? Where are the error messages? – S.Lott Oct 20 at 1:37
Have a day off, Mr Serious Robot. – frou Oct 20 at 1:41
2  
I think it's appropriate enough. Frou is very specifically talking about programming books (as opposed to ANY other sort of book). And specifically whether code examples are readble using the Kindle. – Dave Beer Oct 20 at 16:03

3 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

I love my Kindle for non-technical books, but the programming books I've tried were hard to read. Code samples were sometimes poorly formatted. You couldn't see a diagram and the text at the same time. Personally I'm often flipping back and forth between pages to go back and look at a previous example and I found that hard to do.

I also don't read technical books cover to cover very often. They are usually more skim and then refer back kinds of books to me. Kindle has decent enough bookmarking but it isn't the same as post it notes and dog earing.

I have no tried a Kindle DX(larger screen), but I still think it would have issues. I just like the fast flip back and forth I can get with paper for technical books.

I travel a lot so the Kindle is fantastic for non-technical books. I can carry a bunch of books at a time in such a tiny package. The battery lasts a very long time if the wireless off. It keeps track of where I am in each book.

link|flag
Got it. I don't think I'll buy the Kindle, then, but I'll keep an eye on how the e-ink readers evolve. – frou Oct 20 at 23:09
vote up 1 vote down

I guess I'm not a tree hugger. I like real computer books more. And no, I don't think Kindle is suitable for any complex technical books including most computer books I read.

link|flag
I don't care about trees used to make traditional books. Please elaborate :) – frou Oct 20 at 1:34
It's all about jumping(nothing beats a real book at this chapter), display size and resolution. – Marius Burz Oct 20 at 1:38
vote up 1 vote down

E-readers are useless for reading programming books, Source codes are messed up and it's almost impossible to understand anything. I'm never using E-reader for reading technical books.

link|flag
Have you actually tried one? – leonm Oct 20 at 6:55
Yes, I've tried PRS-700, and friend of mine is claiming same problem for Kindle – rachvela Oct 20 at 7:50

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.