Kindle eBook reader by Amazon was met with great accolades initially. It sold out in 2 days. After all, you can store 200 (medical?) books on one thin 10.3 oz (292 g) tablet. The euphoria lasted until the users actually got the device in their hands. Kindle, it turns out, is a great concept with poor implementation. It makes it easy to buy books and difficult to — eh — read them… Reading books, from technical point at least, is supposed to be easy. Amazon had designed some huge buttons on the sides of the device which users press inadvertently when holding the Kindle and then pages flip back uncontrollably. A reading device which makes reading difficult is unlikely to succeed. I am sure Amazon
See a few funny videos showing pre-Kindle, launch and post-Kindle opinions:
Medieval Helpdesk Solves Problems With a New Technology: The Book
WSJ’s Walt Mossberg review: Will the Kindle catch fire?
Robert Scoble: Whoever designed this should be fired and the team should start over
The iPod of E-Book Reader?
References:
Kindle e-book reader by Amazon: you can have 200 (medical) books on one device. CasesBlog.
Medieval Helpdesk Solves Problems With New Technology. CasesBlog.
Original post by Clinical Cases














