Wednesday, August 08, 2012

Kindle Fire - Part 4, Where for art thou, comma?


Soft keyboards (keyboards that appear on touchscreens) can be a little too smart.  The flexibility allows developers to change the operation of keys, a feature most of the time, but disorienting when taken too far.  Take the example of the lowly comma.  Arguably a piece of punctuation often discarded in modern (read 'text message' style) communication as extraneous.  This jettisoning of the pause character is probably a reflection of early texting, when anything beyond the obvious (e.g. printed on a 9-digit keypad phone) was deemed unnecessary.  But those days are long gone, and the Kindle Fire keyboard has a broad character set, so much so the comma may, gasp, actually get used.  Presumably this left the developers with a question; where to put the comma. Apparently they were left without much supervision, see the attached screenshot and (a challenge for your amusement) find the comma before reading on.



Don't get too confident in your knowledge of where the comma is, even if you found it in the above photo.  Not satisfied with a single placement, the keyboard developers decided the much maligned comma should move around.  I suppose there may have been hot debates about it's location, and they settled these debates by simply incorporating each suggestion.  In case you still haven't found it (or didn't bother to look, I mean really- some people just can't be bothered with this type of thing) the comma is in the corner of the period key (it's small, you may have to squint).  Don't take that to mean it is accessed via the shift key.  No, the comma is accessed by a long press on the period key.  Let's think about that for a sentence.  A comma means a short pause, a period means a long pause.  To access the period you make a short press, to access the comma you make a long press.  This inversion of meaning and action may be the developers just playing with us, and it isn't worth talking about any further as we may never know what they were thinking.  But I digress.  

The comma moves to a new location, the top row of soft keys (lets call them 'super soft keys') that appear in a background-ish color above the keyboard.  Why?  I guess because it was decided the old spot for the comma was too inconvenent.  To help you in resisting the temptation to take the hard way to arrive at a comma, the developers chose to remove the comma from the period key when it is visible in the 'super soft key' area.  This may explain in part why some people hate software developers.  Perhaps another photo would help illustrate my point.



Comma quest aside, the Kindle Keyboard is very comfortable to type on.  This may reflect more on the size of the device (roughly equal to a 7 inch tablet) rather than anything specific to the software inside.  And speaking of that, the software inside is Android-based, so I checked other Android devices and found similar period, comma, and backspace placement oddities.  The backspace is in a spot much more akin to the return key on any other keyboard on the planet- don't even get me started on how badly that will screw you up. 

Key placement complaints aside, it is a little amusing that a device clearly designed for information consumption actually does make for a good data-entry vehicle.  Taking notes are a breeze on the Kindle Fire, maybe not as easy as handwriting or touch typing on a laptop (this is still a typing exercise where you have to watch the keys instead of relying on tactile feedback) but a nice bonus when considering how you might use the device.

ETA: A Kindle software update has been made to retain the comma accessibility from a long press on the period key.  Whether that was in response to this post (doubtful) or not (likely), thank you.


Next Up: Editing / cover flow (K-version vs. Apple) / Setting settings, everywhere.


Monday, August 06, 2012

Kindle Fire - Part 3


Part 3 - Kindle Fire Review - My First Stumbles

Getting the Kindle Fire set up wasn't flawless.  My first stumble was with configuring email.  There was no native exchange support, but the Kindle did graciously advise me to go to the app store to find an app for that.  It seemed like an odd thing to omit, it seems to show business users were not a top priority for the Kindle Fire designers.  Perhaps a mis-step, almost every Kindle Fire I've seen "in the wild" has been in the hands of a person travelling for business, with the occasional college student (usually female, presumably more women than men read books for leisure in college) thrown in.

ETA: The draft of this review included the above statement before Tech Crunch came out and confirmed my observation: More women than men use the Kindle Fire.  If you're a man, don't let that put you off, buy one and represent!  Or maybe you should wait, more on that in a later post.

My second stumble was when typing.  I wrote the first draft of this in the Evernote app on the Kindle Fire.  The stumble was with the placement of the period key. I was going to make a screen capture to illustrate my typing woes, but (a) screen capture on the fire is non-existent out of the box, a shortcoming of the Android 2.2 OS the Fire is based on, and (b) you get the idea without really seeing it, just imagine periods in lieu of every 3 out of four spaces.

Next up: Where for art thou, comma? / Editing / cover flow (K-version vs. Apple) / Setting settings, everywhere.



Friday, August 03, 2012

Kindle Fire - Part 2


The ongoing story of my first use of a Kindle Fire...

My first thought with the Fire in hand was how to get it setup and associating it with my Amazon account.  On other Android devices I’ve used setup began with turning the device on and immediately being asked to connect the device with a Google account.  The Fire does not care if you have a Google account or not, but the device is only useful when associated with an Amazon account, doubly so with an Amazon Prime Account (more on that later).  So how to connect the Fire to an Amazon account?  

If you purchase a Fire directly from Amazon you do nothing, the nice folks at Amazon set this up for you.  If you need to do it yourself it is an each process  I discovered in a few minutes of playing with a Fire in a store.  Just touch the gear Icon in the bar at the top of the screen.
This is probably a good place to mention The Touch Screen Factor.  The Fire has a touch screen.  Not a big deal and easy to handle on phones, even convenient.  The transition to a tablet or Fire takes a little getting used to.  The Fire has some weight to it, and you need to hang on to it.  Getting too grabby could mean accidentally clicking things.  This is where the generous bezel around the Fire’s screen comes in.  It seems excessive when just looking at the device, but pick one up and you’ll understand the benefit, whether by design or not.


Once the Fire and my Amazon account were linked the Fire immediately displayed my library of books.  The Fire also detected apps I've purchased from the Amazon Android app store and displayed them in a list with the option to install each app.  Not being an app-hoarder I chose a few to try on the Fire.  I'm not a person who has hundreds of apps and I also don't install everything on every device.
Next up: My first stumbles.