Thanks for the update. I never tried to do anything but read with mine for the K2 or K3 because it was really hard to use the keyboard when in the pouch. As long as I can read that will be fine. Can you put it to sleep and wake it up when in the case?
Oh yes. Since that's a push button instead of a slider, as long as you put the bottom of the kindle towards the bottom of the case (not the folded end), it works perfectly. And there's probably enough slack at the top for it to work even if you reverse it--say, if you're the type to use the neck cord and want to be able to just flip it up for viewing.
I'll do a longer, actual reading test with it tonight in the bath and report anything new, but I suspect this is going to be an adequate solution for the majority of folks who either need something splash proof for outdoor reading or who are bathtub readers like myself.
Edit, 9:30 PM:
Well, "adequate" is about the best I can call it, though I'm not sure how much of the trouble I had is user induced and how much is due to the IR technology involved. I suspect this may be as good as it gets due to the latter, though.
I first gave it the paper towel leak test, which it passed with flying colors. I then put the KT into it and headed in for an hour-long read. During that session, I managed to get through about 1/2-2/3 of what I would usually read in the same amount of time. I encountered the following issues (none of which I've had happen in "normal" use)--
- Repeated non response to taps or swipes for page turns forward. Never have gotten it to respond to a page back tap, and it's iffy on page back swipes.
- Repeated increase in font size (which normally requires a pinch-out motion) and difficulty using pinch-together to then decrease the size back down.
- Several sudden advances way forward or back on a single tap.
- Menu response was erratic, and the back button never worked at all.
Now, I do read a bare Kindle, and this is the unpadded sleeve. Perhaps a covered Kindle, or the padded sleeve version would tighten the plastic differently. I tried several things--wrapping the excess around both sides and holding it snug, pushing the Kindle all the way into the right corner and holding the sleeve down on that side, using it on a stand, holding it tight with both hands, using fingers and using a stylus. You get the idea. Sometimes it would behave for most of a chapter before acting out. Other times--like with the font size changes--it might take me several minutes before I could get back to reading.
It did seem to behave best when held on the flat of one hand, no gripping of the edges, and tapped for page forward. But who knows? At this point, I'm REALLY interested in others' experiences.
Again, I want to be fair here. I'm not thinking it's the product's fault. It may be something to get used to--a specific pressure or speed of movement that's ideal. Maybe I'm doing something wrong. Heck, maybe it's just my specific Kindle. Or it may be that with the IR technology as a whole, there is never going to be a perfect solution. But these are all issues that I've not encountered with the bare Touch, or with a plastic sleeved iPad--gotta say I'm really learning to appreciate capacitative screens at this point over the IR!
It's still better than the ziploc I tried, so I will be keeping it. Next I'll try adding some padding in there myself to see if that changes anything.
If any one has ideas, I'm open to suggestions.