Amazon is making a fortune off Kindle Accessories

I bought this for my new Kindle after I dropped my first one. $5.98 is a great deal IMO, and I have no complaint at all.

My Kindle recharges pretty quickly too. I can put my laptop to sleep and the Kindle will still charge.

The adapter came with the Kindles that I bought, but I don’t use them. I have the Kindle keyboard.

Says the person whose recent topics of discussion include Captain America, Wii Tennis, 80’s Cartoons, and how a bad episode of Six Feet Under ruined the entire show. I’m sure these are all problems you’ve been having in your Darfur refugee camp, right?

Thanks for contributing though, we all appreciate it so very much.

I agree with this. I don’t have a Kindle, although I do have an iPhone and an iPad. Each comes with a USB power adapter, but a second one will cost you $29. The iPhone dock is also $29, as is the bumper case. And the in-ear headphones are $79. I’ve bought some of this stuff, although I’ve also bought third-party accessories. My point is that these companies regularly charge a lot for accessories.

You can charge it on a computer. I realize you may not like this, but saying your Kindle becomes “useless” just makes you seem like a whiner when that isn’t true.

Then have Grandma make one. Or make your own. Or buy one from one of the hundreds of places that make them cheaply. No one made you pay $30 for a case- you did that. If you didn’t like the price, you should have gotten a cheaper one. it isn’t hard to do.

So… you found a serviceable cable, on Amazon, for $5 and you’re still complaining? What the hell!?

“We” don’t get sucked into shit. You spend your money foolishly, but that is no one’s fault but your own. Thankfully, Amazon is awesome about returns, so send back the merchandise you are unhappy with.

It makes charging on the go easier, and means you can transfer non-Amazon content onto your Kindle.

You can’t tell whether your Kindle is a Kindle? :confused: I must be misreading you.

I know it’s a Kindle but I don’t know specifically what kind. Is there just a regular Kindle because that must be what I have.

Yeah, that is kind of a design flaw, that they didn’t put the type name on the machine. Mine was a gift, I threw the packaging out, and when I wanted to buy a case I didn’t quite know what I had. anymore.

Yeah, I remember calling amazon about an issue I had with my Kindle and I tried to describe what kind I had but I still don’t think the guy ever knew. The problem was resolved, but I’m not sure I’ll ever know the exact brand.

Oh, I get you. If you look up pictures of a Kindle 3/Kindle Keyboard and Kindle Touch and Kindle Fire you should be able to tell the difference.

If you bought the Kindle yourself, you can look at your purchase history in Amazon. That will list the exact model you bought and also list the serial number of the device.

I didn’t buy it myself. It was a gift (or regift, I guess). It seems to be a Kindle 3G Keyboard from the look ofi t.

Can you just accept that the Kindle ($79) and the Kindle Touch ($99) are NOT shipped with adapters, just a USB cable that can used for either charging or data transfer? I promise it is true. Despite the overall silliness of OP’s gripes, he isn’t wrong about this part. The outlet adapter plug is extra for these models.

i made my own kindle case. went to barnes and noble, found a writing journal i liked the cover of, then cut the book block out, put 4 little velcro squares on the cover and kindle… and viola! kindle cover under 10 dollars.

i took the book block to work and use it for note taking, scrap paper, etc.

That’s actually pretty clever. I’m gonna pass that idea on to my friends.:cool:

I don’t know what kindle you’re using, but mine charges in less then a hour. I’ll browse the amazon store, download samples, read them, and buy them if I like in that time/

And it goes about 20 days on a charge, with daily reading. The e-ink system is incredibly efficient. I understand that the LCD variants use a lot more power. But I got my Touch in December and I’ve only charged it twice.

I did buy the converter, but I’ve used it more often to charge my Ipod than anything else.

Incidentally, you will save a lot of battery life by only turning your wireless on when you need it (I typically do so to sync before and after a lengthy bit of reading, since I read on both my Kindle and my iPod)

For you creative types, there are instructions for a number of different homemade Kindle covers at Instructables.com