The New York Times

The New York Times

Subscriptions include full access to breaking news, articles, video, audio, multimedia, and blogs on NYTimes.com.

The New York Times on Kindle is dedicated to providing news coverage of exceptional depth and breadth, as well as opinion that is thoughtful and stimulating. Widely quoted, and often hotly debated, The New York Times is held by its readers to the highest of standards and continues to be regarded by many as the nation’s pre-eminent newspaper. The New York Times has earned an unprecedented 94 Pulitzer Prizes, far more than any other newspaper. A global news staff covers a wide range of interests: from world, national and New York issues to business, culture, science, religion, travel, style, food, sports, health and home. In addition to outside contributors, the editorials page features The New York Times’ own team of award-winning columnists: David Brooks, Maureen Dowd, Thomas L. Friedman, Bob Herbert, Nicholas D. Kristof, Paul Krugman, Frank Rich and John Tierney.

The Kindle Edition of The New York Times contains articles found in the print edition, but will not include some images and tables. Also, some features such as the crossword puzzle, box scores and classifieds are not currently available. For your convenience, issues are automatically delivered wirelessly to your Kindle at 5:00 AM on the weekdays and 5:30 AM on weekends New York City local time.

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6 Responses to The New York Times

  1. Jon Shemitz September 11, 2011 at 4:43 pm #
    960 of 977 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Very good, but could be better, December 22, 2007
    By 
    Jon Shemitz (Santa Cruz, California, United States) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: The New York Times (Kindle Edition)

    I currently pay $35 a month for a six-day subscription to the print edition. The Kindle edition only costs $14 a month. So, if the Kindle edition of the NYT can replace my print subscription, the Kindle pays for itself in just over a year and a half and I get the Sunday NYT ‘for free’. Beyond that, the Kindle edition doesn’t involve killing trees or using noxious chemicals to turn them into paper, and beaming my paper to me every morning takes a lot less fossil fuel than trucking trees to a mill, trucking paper to a press, then delivering the printed paper to my driveway. Plus, I never have to go out in the cold or the rain to find my paper in the bushes or under my car; I should never have to deal with a missed paper, which happens once or twice a month with my delivery service; I never have to suspend delivery when I go on a trip; and my newspaper will actually go with me.

    So, I have a lot of incentive to like the NYT on the Kindle.

    After three days, I’m still not sure if I do.

    On the plus side, my biggest worry before my Kindle arrived turns out to be a non-starter. I wondered how I’d take to reading the news on a screen only a few paragraphs big. As promised, this is not an issue. After a very short time, you don’t really notice the paging any more than you notice turning the page of a book, or moving your eyes to the next column. I’ve read a whole novel without any annoyance, and actually find the comfortably sized Kindle less of a hassle than a broadsheet newspaper. (My SO is looking forward to no more piles of old newspapers on the kitchen table, even if that means our 13 yo won’t be reading the paper any more.)

    Also, I find I really don’t miss the experience of flipping through the paper, looking for those interesting stories that didn’t make the front page. You can browse section by section, and paging through a section a story at a time is really not bad.

    You can store a lot of days worth of news in a stock Kindle, and can search them all quickly; you can store even more if you add a cheap SD card. In the unlikely event that the Times uses a word you don’t know, you can quickly look it up with the Kindle’s great search feature.

    On the minus side, comparing my print edition to the Kindle edition, I can see that the print edition includes stories that the Kindle edition does not. I’m really not sure quite what to make of this: so far, at least, I’m actually reading more of the paper than I used to, because I can carry my Kindle to work and read articles in dead time. It’s hard to know how to balance not even seeing some stories vs reading a lot more of them. (I do know that I really miss the Market Gauges pages even if, realistically, I only look at them a few times a month.)

    A less ambiguous minus is the pictures, which (to use a technical term) really suck. They’re hard to make out, and there’s a max of one per story, no matter how many there are in the print version. Even worse, many of the pictures and – so far as I can see – ALL the charts and graphs are omitted. This hurts business coverage; I haven’t seen a Science Section yet, but I imagine this will be really painful.

    So. Convenience, greenness, and economics vs the loss of maybe 15% of the content. This is a hard call, for me, and I sure wish the NYT would make it easier by including the missing content.

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  2. Reader Gail "Gail" September 11, 2011 at 4:50 pm #
    1,167 of 1,191 people found the following review helpful:
    3.0 out of 5 stars
    Where’s the Rest of it?, August 25, 2008
    By 
    Reader Gail “Gail” (Franklin, TN United States) –
    This review is from: The New York Times (Kindle Edition)

    Generally pleased with my subscription but VERY annoyed that, in contrast to the description that it will include NYT articles sans graphs, charts and crossword–what you’re not told and I tried very hard to find out before ordering–is that several articles are omitted from each edition and sometimes the articles that are included abruptly end, chopping off the final few sentences or paragraph. Yesterday’s Sunday edition (Aug 24) only had 3 articles from the Book Review–a fraction of that section. This flaw needs work fixing or NYT need to state the subscription contents clearly.

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  3. Capt'n Bob "captn_bob" September 11, 2011 at 5:38 pm #
    941 of 974 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Very good electronic version, pricing not quite there yet., November 26, 2007
    By 
    Capt’n Bob “captn_bob” (Lincoln, CA USA) –
    This review is from: The New York Times (Kindle Edition)

    Update November 1, 2009:

    My original review is now two years old, and I thought it’s time for an update. Surprisingly nothing of consequence has changed. The Avantgo application that I refer to is no longer around. However I now just use the Times mobile site which has equivalent features; thanks to the Times for providing that service! I can view the Times’ mobile site on my smartphone (which replaced my PDA) either thru wifi or over-the-air.

    Like Avantgo the mobile site provides excellent color images. All-in-all the Times mobile site is perhaps even better than Avantgo used to be, the only downside is that it is ‘streamed’ in the sense that you must be on-line either with wifi or your phones data plan; you can’t ‘take it with you’, like the Kindle edition. If you have an iPhone you will be even better off, since there is an App for that; using the App you don’t need to be online as the content will be updated each time you open the App and cached on the iPhone.

    One other informational note: many newspapers such as the Washington Post, London Times etc. have ‘moble’ sites now to capture the smartphone market. These are really excellent tools, since they are in large part advert-free, including just text and images. If you haven’t tried them they are in many ways superior to the smartphone ‘browser’ experience being much faster and simpler to navigate.

    Back to the NY Times Kindle editions: I have become something of a fan of single Sunday editions since the price is such a bargain, and I can read sections during the following week.

    The Times web site has been vastly improved in many ways since my original review, so it is an even more compelling alternative setting aside the price (free). I’m pleased that the Times is evolving, we all have to root for their survival and success; I still maintain that their marketing dept should join the 21st. century along with their editorial staff.

    ——— Original Review from 2007 follows —————

    To put this review in perspective I’ve been reading the NY Times every day for several years on my PDA, as delivered electronically by [...]. That edition has been my ‘gold standard’ for e-reading because I can download it in just a few minutes as my coffee brews along with the Washington Post and London Times, and then read it as I have my coffee, or take it with me to read on a commute. (When I’m travelling I can get my daily dose of newspapers from avantgo as long as there is wifi nearby.)

    NY Times recently made significant improvements to their avantgo edition, so it includes all the major sections of the paper. The articles are all text, no ads, and interestingly on the PDA the pictures are quite good and in color(!). But…although the main articles are included, many are not because of the format, space, whatever. Bottom line, there are still enough articles that I run out of time before I run out of articles. The only drawback (for me) is that the PDA form factor, while great for travel, is a little space-challenged. Nevertheless, as I mentioned, it’s my ‘gold standard’ for electronic editions since I don’t want to carry my laptop everywhere. And the avantgo service is free.

    So I was pretty excited to compare the Kindle subscription edition with what I’ve been using. To cut to the chase I’m happy to report that, for me, the Kindle edition is far superior. There are many more articles, improved navigation and of course the form factor! I was overwhelmed with the Sunday edition which has the magazine and book reviews in addition to the regular news. All-in-all a great offering.

    Now about the price of the subscription. I thought it was too high until I went and looked at the alternative offerings. Turns out it’s half the price of the print edition, and just about the same price as the electronic edition. (Of course the web edition and avantgo are free in comparison.) So I can see where NY Times slotted this subscription, I have to say it fits in pretty well with the alternatives.

    But…I’m afraid it won’t succeed at this price. And that concerns me because I really want these Kindle subscriptions to be wild successes and stoke the Kindle experience itself. (Which is why I’m taking the time and trouble to write this review.)

    The price point needs to be $9.95, or even $5.95 to get significant traction. People who will subscribe are not choosing between print and electronic, they are choosing between Kindle and free (web or PDA) electronic alternatives.

    My claim here is that any income the NY Times gets from a Kindle subscription is incremental, and they are not going to capture these subscribers thru one of their other channels. In my own case I’m willing to go from a zero cost subscription to a paid subscription, but not at the current price.

    I’m disappointed the Times doesn’t…

    Read more

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  4. Mediahound September 11, 2011 at 6:02 pm #
    1,334 of 1,367 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Great build quality and protection for Kindle!, March 4, 2009
    By 
    Mediahound (SF Bay Area, CA United States) –
    (VINE VOICE)
      
    (TOP 100 REVIEWER)
      

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Belkin Neoprene Kindle Case (Fits 6″ Display, 2nd Generation Kindle) (Accessory)

    Customer Video Review Length:: 2:16 Mins

    This is my favorite case for the Kindle. As someone who likes to take out the Kindle from a case while reading it, this slip case works great. I don’t have to deal with any straps or mounts at all and the case offers great protection when I’m storing and transporting my Kindle. I’m very happy with this case for the price as the build quality seems top notch (build quality is better than the Patagonia one and that one has straps so is less convenient!)

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  5. K. Bunker "KBunker" September 11, 2011 at 6:58 pm #
    282 of 290 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Perfectly good for what it is, February 25, 2009
    By 
    K. Bunker “KBunker” (Massachusetts, USA) –
    (VINE VOICE)
      
    (REAL NAME)
      

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Belkin Neoprene Kindle Case (Fits 6″ Display, 2nd Generation Kindle) (Accessory)

    Does what it’s supposed to do and looks fine too. With the Kindle 2 being so sexily slim, I didn’t want to stick it semi-permanently into a book-cover type case that would more than double its bulk while it’s in use. (“Does this case make my Kindle look fat?”) And neither did I want to pay $40 or $100 (!!!??!?) for the Patagonia or Cole Haan sleeve case. So I went with the Belkin and I’m happy with it. The soft neoprene plus a layer of leather should give my Kindle all the protection it needs.

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  6. Father of 3 September 11, 2011 at 7:39 pm #
    391 of 405 people found the following review helpful:
    3.0 out of 5 stars
    Returning it for the patagonia, March 5, 2009
    By 
    Father of 3 (California) –
    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Belkin Neoprene Kindle Case (Fits 6″ Display, 2nd Generation Kindle) (Accessory)

    Though it is exactly what it claims to be (though it really does smell like the other reviews claim), I’ve compared this to the more expensive patagonia and like the patagonia much better, even for the price. I thought I would use the Kindle naked, but the patagonia offers me the flexibility to use it both ways and after nearly dropping the kindle when someone bumped into me at the airport, i decided that the extra protection while I’m reading is worth the price.

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