If you have been toying with the idea of purchasing an Amazon Kindle DX for reading PDF and Microsoft Office documents, read Walt’s take on the Kindle first:
Kindle DX has PDF display capability built in, so it renders PDF files much more accurately than the older Kindles. That is a big improvement. It also allows you to view Excel and PowerPoint files if you save them in PDF format before sending them to your Kindle DX.
I tried a variety of documents, and in many cases the results were great. The text was crisp, and the tables and graphics looked like they should. But I found that on some of these PDF documents, the text was too small to read. Yet, the Kindle lacks the ability to zoom in on PDF documents. You often can make the type larger by rotating to landscape mode, but this splits the PDFs into multiple pages, sometimes breaking them awkwardly.
Also, Amazon has raised its fees for converting and delivering business documents via email to all Kindles. The charge was formerly 10 cents a document. Now, it’s 15 cents per megabyte, which can add up if you load up your Kindle with lots of large documents. Most of my test documents, which were fairly small, cost over $1 each.
Luckily, Kindles allows transfer via a USB cable so you can at least save on the document conversion cost.
Find this article at: http://digitalinspiration.com/office-documents-on-kindle-dx
web: http://www.labnol.org/ email: amit@labnol.org
