3G KINDLE ACCESS FOR AMAZON BOOK DOWNLOADS AND FOR FREE WIKIPEDIA (100+ countries) AND WITH FREE 3G WEB BROWSING ENABLED ALSO (“only” 60+ COUNTRIES)

This blog entry is an added copy of the Reference page information just revised for describing 3G Kindle web access globally.  This one is a normal blog entry for today, which I hope will be useful, describing what is possible now.  A copy that will be updated as new info appears is at http://bit.ly/kwpweb.

KEY POINT to remember:
In any of the countries that don’t have free 3G Kindle web browsing enabled for their own residents (due to no lower-cost Agreement with a 3G carrier in place), a 3G Kindle owned by customers whose Kindles are enabled for their own countries will still retain free 3G web-browsing access in the more restricted-3G-use countries.


EXAMPLE:
ALL with
(1) global-access Kindles (Kindle 3’s and some later editions of earlier models
and
(2) who are residents in one of the 100+ countries WITH 3G Agreements for general Amazon Kindle Store Book downloads:

They will generally also have free 3G access to Wikipedia.

Of the above:
Additionally:
If they are residents of any of the 60+ countries WITH free 3G web-browsing enabled for its residents, their Kindles will also have free 3G web browsing enabled for 100+ countries (when traveling).

If they are residents of any of the 40+ countries WITHOUT free 3G web-browsing enabled for its residents, their Kindles will NOT have free 3G web browsing enabled for their own country. (SOME of these find their Kindle’s 3G web browser will work in other, non-restricted countries.)



Because of the above:
A customer residing in one of the 60 countries with free 3G web browsing enabled, and who has an internationally-capable Kindle, WILL have free 3G web browsing capability wherever there is 3G access for Amazon Kindle Store book downloads.

A few paragraphs below, you’ll see an Amazon UK website listing of 61 countries in which UK residents — and residents in other 3G-web-browsing enabled contries — can use their Kindle (UK: K3)  3G experimental web browsers to slowly access (for free) websites other than Wikipedia.  The listing or table was brought to our attention by G. Javor of France in an Amazon UK forum thread.

Nine key countries with no official 3G web browsing capability currently (outside of Wikipedia and the book store) are

Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, and Sweden.

ADDED BENEFIT FOR RESIDENTS OF THOSE 60+ COUNTRIES WITH 3G WEB BROWSER ACCESS:
Best of all, the table’s information also matches forum reports from U.S. and UK residents traveling abroad who find they can use their free 3G browsing in those 60+ listed countries AND even in the other 40+ countries for which the 3G web browsing feature has not been enabled officially for their own residents (due to no lower-cost 3G carrier agreements with Amazon, apparently).

FORUM DISCUSSIONS OF WHAT HAS BEEN DOABLE
These speak to the last point above (“Best of all…”):
The same type of unexpected added access is described in the UK forum thread which lists countries in which traveling UK Kindle owners actually have been able to do 3G web browsing, and those reports also included countries NOT on the official 3G web-browsing-enabled list, such as France, Germany, Netherlands, etc.

Also, a post on the 3rd page of an U.S. Amazon Kindle Forum message thread, from T’Mara in Austria, reports that although the 3G web browsing isn’t enabled for residents of Austria, at least some Austrians traveling to other countries CAN use the 3G experimental web browsing feature in countries where that IS enabled (via Agreements with cellular network carriers).

CAUTION
That is good news but also reminds us that if the feature is used “too much” Amazon might not be able to continue offering it in some regions, so I use my WiFi capability whenever I can, instead, to minimize the cost to Amazon, in hopes of their retaining/continuing the free feature.

Here is that TABLE of 61 countries at http://amzn.to/uk-3gwebwhere for which Amazon UK shows currently (last re-checked on 6/13/11] – and all emphases mine) :

International Web Browsing

The experimental web browser is free to use over Kindle’s 3G or Wi-Fi connections. If you are travelling outside the United Kingdom, you can access Wikipedia in over 100 countries anywhere you have a 3G connection (check the wireless coverage map here).  You can browse other websites globally via a Wi-Fi connection.  Access to other websites while travelling abroad is available via a 3G connection in the 61 countries listed below.
[Actually, U.S. and UK residents travelling in countries where 3G web access isn’t allowed for its own residents due to carrier-agreements, find that they can use the 3G web-browsing access in those countries as well.– ab]

Albania Argentina Aruba Australia
Bahamas Barbados Bermuda Bolivia
Brazil Bulgaria Canada Cayman Islands
Chile Colombia Croatia Czech Republic
Dominican Republic Ecuador El Salvador Grenada
Guam Guatemala Guyana Haiti
Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland
India Ireland Jamaica Japan
Kenya Liechtenstein Macedonia Mexico
Montserrat Nicaragua Norway Panama
Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland
Puerto Rico Romania Russia Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines South Africa Slovakia
Slovenia Switzerland Taiwan Thailand
Ukraine United States of America Uruguay US Virgin Islands
Venezuela

Access to the web browser within these countries may vary and is subject to change.

Kindle’s new web browser is based on WebKit to provide a better web browsing experience. Now it’s easier than ever to find the information you’re looking for right from your Kindle. Click here to learn more about using Kindle’s experimental web browser.

AMAZON U.S. AND THE FREE 3G WEB BROWSING ACCESS GLOBALLY
As I’ve said on the Kindle forums, 3G web browsing is probably a financial minefield for Amazon.

Also, they likely have complex contracts being negotiated currently, and in some cases really may not be able to say anything without possibly affecting talks.

THE UPSIDES OF ALL THIS, EVEN FOR THE 40 MORE-RESTRICTED-3G COUNTRIES
Amazon, unlike Barnes and Noble, sells its books outside the U.S.  It also is the only e-reader maker with 3G web-browsing to external websites, as the other e-book vendors keep the 3G access (if their models have it at all) to their stores only and certainly don’t offer free-3G Wikipedia, which Amazon offers for free 3G-access EVERYwhere in the world that they have any cellular wireless arrangements.
This is a real boon for students of any age and IS an expense for Amazon.

With over a hundred countries in which Amazon offers free 3G wireless to download books to their Kindle and browse Wikipedia from their books, Amazon, for all my nagging of them, is way ahead of the field in this important area.

That they offer free 3G web browsing in 61 countries now is actually hard to believe for some, seen on forums almost daily asking if the 3G web browsing access on the experimental web browser can really be free.  The answer’s Yes, for now, in 61 areas of the world, but the feature has been “experimental” for 4 years and there are no promises that I’ve seen.  The fine print in their Agreements with us say they can charge fees at some point.  With a balky e-ink web browser (even if it’s more capable than in earlier Kindle models), any charges would not be a winning proposition either.

And, for the first time, in July-August 2010, their marketing ads stressed the “Free 3G” in the titles or headers, so they wouldn’t be changing that very soon.

On the general International product-marketing pages, they include in their listed features:
New WebKit-Based Browser – Free 3G web browsing (experimental)
Abandoning that too soon when it’s featured in the marketing would not have been good business and even a year later would not be, because that advertising continues.

Time will tell, as they say.  It’s a great experiment though.  As I’ve said in other threads, I often use mine for step-by-step directions when lost, as a passenger in a car.  The fact that you can access information for free almost wherever you are (bus, car, beach, park) is just a Huge benefit, in my opinion.

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ‘3G’ AND ‘WIFI’?
This is something most would never have to know, but I hope that my earlier article on this will help.

http://kindleworld.blogspot.com/2011/08/free-3g-kindle-access-globally-to.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+AKindleWorld+%28A+Kindle+World+blog%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

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