A few years after Amazon started selling e-readers, they started to provide users with choices to connect to the internet. WIFI only and WIFI + cellular internet, the cellular model cost more, but ...
If you have an older Amazon Kindle with 3G internet, take note that you may not be able to wirelessly access and download new content anymore starting in December. As The Verge reports, Amazon has ...
Mobile network operators are getting ready to shut down their 3G networks in order to free up resources for 5G. In the US, AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon are all expected to pull the plug by the end of ...
Amazon confirms that its touchscreen Kindle e-reader–expected to reach consumers next month–won’t support Web browsing over its 3G wireless connection. “Our new Kindle Touch 3G enables you to connect ...
Not to be outdone by Barnes & Noble's new Nook, Amazon just announced a cheaper version of its 3G Kindle, shaving $25 off the standard $189 by incorporating ads or "special offers" on the device.
Online retailer Amazon.com Inc. is selling an ad-laden version of its Kindle 3G e-reader, which has wireless service for downloading books. Amazon said late Tuesday that the new Kindle 3G with Special ...
I have the 3g-only Kindle 2, and use the wireless access every single day to read the paper (subscription to the NY Times). If I had WiFi I'd probably hook it into my home network for that, but I do ...
Amazon.com Inc. isn’t the first company to sell an electronic book reader with an easy-on-the-eyes electronic ink display, but its method for delivering those books may have opened up a whole new use ...
The Amazon Kindle e-reader has many different models with optional 3G cellular access. These will connect up to the closest cellphone tower that provides 3G data and allow users Kindles to connect up ...
The latest Amazon Kindle, which goes on sale today and which I’ve been trialing for the last week or so, is elegant and attractive. Although it’s the lowest-priced Kindle in the Amazon range, for the ...
Ryne was ostensibly a senior editor at Android Police, working at the site from 2017-2022. But really, he is just some verbose dude who digs on tech, loves Android, and hates anticompetitive practices ...