I got about $600 for my birthday, and while it is burning a hole in my pocket, I don't want to be wasteful. I have an iPhone and I love it. I have the kindle app and enjoy it, although it is pretty small. I have a laptop on the counter and a 10" netbook. Id like to do more reading and I cant decide if the weight of the iPad will be cumbersome.
Anyone have one or more?
What would you choose ?
To me, your choice really depends on what you're wanting to do with it. If reading printed material is your *primary* purpose, then I am a huge fan of the Kindle. (My wife and I have owned every version so far, and just upgraded to the K3.) It's extremely light, extremely easy to read, with amazing battery life and thousands upon thousands of available books. The unlit screen won't tire your eyes; it's as comfortable as an actual printed book. If you subscribe to Kindle magazines/newspapers -- I get Poets & Writers, the New York Times, and The New Yorker -- these are currently ONLY deliverable to actual Kindle devices, not to devices that only run Kindle apps (like smartphones or the iPad).
However, if reading text is only part of your interest, I can't praise the iPad highly enough. I've owned mine since just after Thanksgiving and now can't imagine life without it. (Seriously.) It's the perfect portable solution for Web browsing, watching movies/TV shows, maintaining your social sites, playing games, and a host of other things. There are apps available that do some amazing things; it's truly a highly entertaining and functional device.
Some things to consider: the iPad currently has no option for subscribing to magazines or newspapers (unlike the Kindle). You can buy magazines for the iPad, of course, but you can't *subscribe*. You have to purchase each one individually, at the full cover price. (There are weird exceptions: If you subscribe to the print version of PEOPLE, for example, you can get the iPad version -- which is amazing, packed with video, audio, and lots of extra photos -- for free.) Rumor has it that this will change as soon as the publishers work out their problems. But if you want to wake up every morning to find the day's New York Times or Chicago Tribune waiting for you on your device, then you need the Kindle.
Also, 3G access is free on Kindle (assuming you get the 3G version); it's how you surf the Amazon store, buy books, and can do rudimentary Web browsing. On the iPad, 3G costs. But if you've got WiFi at home and can access hotspots when you're out -- either from stores/restaurants or via your smartphone -- then you may never need 3G on your iPad.
To me, though, it isn't really fair to compare the iPad to the Kindle; they're really quite different devices that do different things. The iPad is more a laptop/netbook replacement than a glorified e-reader. I use it for e-mail, streaming movies from Netflix, updating Facebook, etc. None of those things is even possible on Kindle. But I also think the Kindle does what it does better than any other device out there.
So. . . I still carry an iPod (much more storage than the iPad), a Kindle (because of all of the above), my Droid phone (because it's a fantastic phone), and, yes, my iPad. Each one does its thing perfectly and justifies its place in my carry-on. And my life.
My .02.<g>
Bob