Amazon’s support cutoff has pushed parts of the Kindle community into open revolt, with jailbreaks becoming a way to fight planned obsolescence and keep working e-readers out of the e-waste pile.
It may be possible to jailbreak an older, end-of-support Kindle and continue adding books to it. But doing so carries risks.
Night reading, built-in dictionaries, cheaper books, and notes you will actually use later. Here is the case for ditching physical books and never looking back.
Amazon’s latest update finally delivers system-wide Dark Mode to the Kindle Colorsoft and Scribe Colorsoft, covering every surface of the device with per-section customisation.
At $630, this new breed of Kindle is expensive, but its sleek build, color panel, and paper-like display surface are the core reasons to buy it, if you can stick with the basics.
Amazon will end support for Kindle e-readers released in 2012 or earlier starting May 20, 2026. Here’s everything you need to know, and what you should do before the deadline hits.
Amazon told Kindle owners this week that it’s ending support for all e-readers released in 2012 or earlier, making them virtually unable to load any new content.
The feature will require customers to buy both versions of the title, but at a discounted price.
The price point hurts, but the device is nice: Meet the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft.
Amazon has confirmed that the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft will soon be available in a new Fig colorway.
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