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image Shoppers will be in for a rude surprise when they buy Kindles but end up moving on to other readers and can’t transfer their DRMed e-books.

And as hinted by O’Reilly downloading stats, many tech-smart people favor the nonproprietary ePub format rather than a Kindle-related one.

But as shown by my love of the Kindle’s speech synthesis—just the ticket for enjoying books while out walking—the K machine has its own positives.

So I’m not surprised to read that the Kindle DX is out of stock despite the $489 price. Oh, the ironies! Amazon only recently was bragging how, unlike Barnes & Noble, the maker of the Nook, it was keeping up with demand.

 

Shipping waits for DXes could be between four and six weeks. Now if Amazon will only give unit-numbers sold vs. the number made! Could it actually be about to phase out the DX? Will we soon see a DX with a rugged plastic screen to compete with the Plastic Logic Que machine with the eight-by-eleven screen, as some speculate? I wouldn’t be surprised.

Some e-book deals of possible interest right now: The $259 Kindle with free two-day U.S. shipping and the usual six-inch screen—plus Fictionwise/eReader’s two offers of the $149.95 jetBook Lite LCD reader with $50 in free books and the $259.99 eSlick Reader with $100 in freebies. Check out the pros and cons of these before acting. Some may find, for example, that page-changing on the eSlick isn’t as easy as on the Kindles. Then again, unlike the K machines, the eSlick can read books using the ePub standard.

Refurbed second-gen Kindles are $219. I’m not sure you can currently get even reburb DXes via Amazon.com.

 
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