Kindle 2.0 Wish List

Since the web is buzzing with rumors of an October surprise (or even a September surprise) of one or more new Kindles, I’ve been thinking about what I want in Kindle 2.0. My wish list is mostly about software improvements rather than hardware improvements. And, since I’m sure Jeff Bezos is reading:

  • Navigating to and from footnotes/endnotes is time-consuming and painful. Fix it. How about letting us double-click the scroll wheel on a line of text with a footnote/endnote to view it and then click or double-click the scroll wheel to return to the text? Or, how about assigning a keyboard hot-key so we can scroll to a line of text and click the hot-key to go to/from the footnote/endnote?
  • Manual downloading is annoying. Support scheduled downloading. I subscribe to Newsweek and Atlantic Monthly on the Kindle and get a fair number of book samples and books. I have to turn on the wireless connection, waiting for any download(s) that are ready, and then remember to turn off the wireless connection so my battery doesn’t drain. Why not let us tell our Kindle to turn on wireless and check for downloads on a daily or weekly schedule?
  • More newspapers and magazines. The Kindle store has virtually the same list of periodicals now as when it opened. Why isn’t the selection growing? If publications already have their content in digital form for the web, getting them to sell it on the Kindle shouldn’t be that hard. For example, I would think the Foreign Affairs crowd is affluent, travels a lot, and thinks about the environmental impact of printing and shipping. Why not get Foreign Affairs, which is just about all text anyway, on the Kindle?
  • Support USB-based charging. I almost always have my laptop with me, even when I travel. And, I usually have my iPhone USB-based charger with me too. It would be awesome to not have to carry a Kindle charger and just be able to charge via a USB cable.
  • Make buying books from samples seamless. When I’m done reading a sample, I have to note my place in the text, buy the full book from the link at the end of the sample, delete the sample, open the full book, and find my place again. Ugh. When I buy the full book from the link at the end of the sample, the sample should just expand to become the full book and I should be able to keep right on reading from where I am. (Also, make the progress bar of a sample based on the length of the full book rather than the length of the sample so a reader knows what they’re in for if they buy the full book.)
  • Make deleting things easier. Let us delete anything by scrolling to it, clicking the wheel on it, and choosing delete. Don’t make us deal with the content manager, check boxes, and confirmation windows for a simple delete. Painful. And, when we close out of a book/periodical at or very near near the end, ask us if we want to delete it.
  • Let us file/categorize things. I want to be able to browse my Kindle content by read/unread, fiction/non-fiction, sample/full-book, my favorites, etc. Make it easy to create folders or labels to support organization.
  • Put an “Add to Wish List” button on the main pages for e-books on the Kindle store. Seems like a no-brainer, but we still have to go to another page, like the full comments for an e-book, to be able to put an e-book on our Wish List.
I can’t wait to see what Amazon has in store Kindle 2.0 and hope that at least a few items from this list make the cut!

Dear Jeff Bezos

Dear Jeff Bezos,

You don’t know me. But, I buy at least an e-book a week on the Kindle Store and evangelize the Kindle to strangers literally every day who ask me, “Hey, what the heck is that thing?” So, I have two favors to ask.

First, could you give us a place on Amazon.com to request that specific books be Kindlelized? I’m sure you’re already focused on bestsellers and new releases. But, if you give Kindle users a chance to express our desires, we might surprise you. For example, here are a few I’d ask for:

Next, could you make the main web pages for Kindle books include “Add to Wish List” buttons? We kinda have to dig to find them right now. Having them on the main pages would be really handy.

I’ve been blown away by the Kindle in the few months I have been using it. Thanks for making this amazing device. I can’t wait to see what you do next!

Marc :-)

We hope Kindle and its successors may gradually and incrementally move us over years into a world with longer spans of attention, providing a counterbalance to the recent proliferation of info-snacking tools. I realize my tone here tends toward the missionary, and I can assure you it’s heartfelt. — Jeff Bezos, Amazon.com Founder and CEO, in his annual letter to shareholders.