Kindle - The Things You Didn't Know
- Publish Date
- Monday, 20 July 2015, 1:29PM
Reading a book is one of life's most simple yet most relaxing forms of entertainment. For years we've turned to paper for our entertainment but times are changing. More and more people are turning to Kindles for their reading fix. While kindles are easy to operate some models have extra functionality making them even more valuable.
Here are 8 reasons a kindle could be a great purchase.
1. Surf the web
Kindle isn’t just for reading books! You can use the device to browse the Internet. You might find that it’s slower than your phone or computer, but you can still use it to access your Facebook and read the news. On your home screen, just click “Menu” then “Experimental” followed by “Launch Browser” and you’re ready to browse. (Not available on all models)
2. Create collections
Just like a physical library, Kindle allows the user to create organized collections. This means you can group your books by category, user, or whatever you choose. Maybe you want to keep your recipes guides separate from your Gatsbys. You can do that. Just select “Create a Collection” on your home screen, type in the name you would like to call it and click “Save”.
3. Refresh
Like any electronic device, your Kindle might give you trouble. If your screen becomes corrupted, you can refresh it by hitting Alt and G at the same time. This will refresh the screen for you. If that doesn’t work, try turning your Kindle off completely by holding the power switch to the right until the screen goes black, and then turn it back on.
4. Have your Kindle read to you
If your eyes are tired, why not have your Kindle read to you out loud? You can do that. So long as the specific publisher has not disabled the option, you can make your device read aloud by clicking the Text menu button, which looks like, “Aa” followed by selecting, “Text to speech: Turn on”. From there, you can stop and start the speech feature by pressing Shift+Sym or use the device’s space-bar to pause or resume your book.
5. Capture a screenshot
Want to remember a quote or save a photo for later? Kindle can do that too. If you want to take a screenshot of anything that appears on your screen, just click Alt-Shift-G. This will save a file which you can find later in your documents folder.
6. Use the dictionary
Maybe you’re reading Foucault again and you’re not sure what a word means. That’s okay, because your Kindle knows. Just place the Kindle’s cursor over the unknown word and a dictionary definition will appear. On newer Kindles, it can also save every word you look up under a Vocabulary Builder, making flash cards for future reference. Do I know what “gregarious” means? I sure do.
7. Turn off social settings
Do you see reading as your private time? As you’ve been using your Kindle you may have noticed comments and highlights from other readers on the books you’re reading. If this is an irritation to you, you can easily turn this setting off. Just go to, “Home” “Menu” “Settings” and finally, “Popular Highlights” where you can switch this setting to off.
8. Add bookmarks, highlights and annotations
If you see something you want to remember later, you can bookmark, highlight, or add notes to the piece you’re reading. Just click, “Menu” followed by “Add bookmark/annotation/highlight”. You can access these later by clicking “View Notes and Marks”.