Amazon's Kindle Paperwhite ups the e-reader ante (pictures)
Amazon's $119 Kindle Paperwhite e-reader from every angle.
David Carnoy
Executive Editor David Carnoy has been a leading member of CNET's Reviews team since 2000. He covers the gamut of gadgets and is a notable reviewer of mobile accessories and portable audio products, including headphones and speakers. He's also an e-reader and e-publishing expert as well as the author of the novels Knife Music, The Big Exit and Lucidity. All the titles are available as Kindle, iBooks, Kobo e-books and audiobooks.
At first glance, Amazon's new Kindle Paperwhite e-ink e-reader looks a lot like last year's Kindle Touch. That's because aside from the missing physical home button, the chassis is mostly the same -- and the two devices actually both weigh 7.5 ounces.
But turn the Paperwhite on and you'll see some key differences. For starters, the Paperwhite has that integrated light that Kindle aficionados have been waiting for.
Capacitive touch screen, redesigned user interface
It also has a capacitive touch screen rather than the IR-based touch screen found on competing touch-screen models from Barnes & Noble, Sony, and Kobo.
And finally, that screen is a higher-resolution 1,024x768-pixel display with 212ppi that allows text and images to be rendered more crisply (images also appear more detailed).
Look closely and you'll see that by moving to a capacitive touch screen, Amazon's designers were able to shave some thickness off the bezel (the IR transmitters that measure your finger taps on the screen were built into the bezel on the Touch), making the Paperwhite slightly thinner than the Touch. Amazon says the bezel is 77 percent shorter (that helps reduce the small shadow the raised bezel casts).
As with all these devices, I need to play around with the Paperwhite for a while to uncover any potential flaws or bugs (Amazon and other companies always release firmware upgrades for their devices that improve performance and add features). But my initial impression is that this is a big step forward for the Kindle e-ink line. Though it may not be a quantum jump, this is the Kindle a lot of people have been waiting for and they should be impressed by it.