I would say Kindle vs. Nook since they're the ones I'm considering the most, but I know there's plenty of others out there so I figured I'd give them a shot too.Anyway I'm considering an e-reader lately, and I've been looking mostly at Kindle and Nook (the current generations). I've played with a first-gen Nook but no Kindle. Nook was cool but not the best--I hear the Nook Color is a huge improvement, but I also hear (and read everywhere) that the new Kindle Wi-Fi is just amazing. The better PDF conversion would be perfect for me (a lot of research and literary journals in PDF format). Both are fesible to me at this point.I'm wondering if I should just go to Best Buy and play with them. I know there's a lot of Kindle lovers on TWW, but anyone that loves a Nook?
11/18/2010 2:16:44 PM
I've had both of them and the kindle was much better imo. The Nook just had too many small annoyances for me. This may have been because of the software ( they've had an update since I had mine). Overall though I just really didn't care for the touchscreen. Full disclosure: I returned the Kindle 3 and got an iPad. I did find it easier and more enjoyable to use than the Nook for the 2 weeks (5 books) that I had it though.
11/18/2010 2:31:48 PM
I can't believe people pay for these things.
11/18/2010 2:36:12 PM
I have not had the others, but I'll say this. I really enjoy the iPad, and since it can do so much else besides being an e-reader, it's the only one that I'll ever get of the current pack. I just can't justify carrying around an additional device for simply reading books. With the iPad I have, I can use it as an alarm clock, check my email everywhere (with WiFi), browse the web, stream, etc. etc. After having that, I would not be interested in a plain e-reader, but instead would be looking for a tablet that does e-reading.[Edited on November 18, 2010 at 8:52 PM. Reason : ]
11/18/2010 8:50:01 PM
my wife loves the kindle - she has the previous model from the one that is out now - she reads a ton and for long trips it's great to be able to just carry her kindle instead of multiple booksi think ncsuwolfy may be the resident nook person
11/18/2010 11:34:11 PM
i do have a nook. i got it right after xmas last yeari get the ipad argument but for a serious reader, there is no comparison-- you have to have an e-reader!i haven't played with a kindle much. the main selling point on the nook for me is that i can borrow books from my library on it and i can also lend books among other nook usersit should be a low-feature device imo.
11/19/2010 12:47:07 AM
The Nook Color comes out soon (well, today, the 19th) but I'm unsure of that. of course, it's also a hell of a lot more expensive.I guess I'm trying to make a case for a Nook Wi-Fi over a Kindle Wi-fi right now.
11/19/2010 2:02:58 AM
yeah, if you are a big reader (someone who is never without a book and who has to take several when they travel because they go through them so quickly), there is simply no comparison between an e-reader and an ipadthe cheapest ipad with wifi and 3g is something around $680 after tax, yes? that's more than 3.5 times the cost of the 3g kindle and the ipad doesn't do for an e-reader nearly as well as the nook or the kindle (especially if you like to read outside and/or for long periods of time like i do)granted, it does more and it does come with the priceless apple product badge of pride that you can wear when you whip it out, but for the extra $490 (if kindle 3g, which i'd take over the nook 3g), i'd much rather carry both an e-reader and quality netbook because they'll both perform better at their particular tasks than the ipadi took an e-reader and netbook on my 2-week honeymoon in europe and i can say from experience (with an understanding of the limitations the ipad) that there is no way the ipad would have been able to serve the purpose of both...so i spent less money, got more functionality, and the only downside was a little weight and space
11/19/2010 8:45:02 AM
^which in my opinion is how they all will eventually evolve into. There simply is not a big enou market to spend hundreds of bucks on an electronic book device that can't do anything else.As for the Apple thing, I personally hate the Apple iCrap badges they give to everything, and the way they censor many apps that they don't like. The only reason I mention the iPad is that it is the first device that does what a tablet should, and last all day doing it. Once HP or another manufacturer comes out with a great Android baased tablet, I will probably be more in favor of that. My argument was more e-reader vs. tablet instead of APPLE IPAD PWNS ALL kinda fanboy shit.
11/19/2010 9:37:37 AM
11/19/2010 9:53:52 AM
11/19/2010 10:19:14 AM
^My wife has a net book and it does good for her in the basic surfing and typing department. But I have a serious desktop gaming rig, so I do my real work on that computer, and have little desire to carry that additional bulk around with me. But when I just need to type something quick (like this message), browse the web, etc. I can whip open the iPad and do it. Plus with the streaming of Netflix and other content, it has great flexibility to me. This morning for instance it was my alarm clock, then it was my music player while I cook and eat breakfast, and now I am doing email and catching up on some work stuff while I am home today. At work I can quickly check my web based work order system, and complete work orders while I walk down the hall. And I don't have to wait for it to come out of standby mode, or worry about charging it when I get back to my desk so that it doesn't die after lunch, etc.In the end it comes down to personal preference. I am still not on the e-reader bandwagon for one simple reason; a lot of the books I like are not available in an electronic format. Even with the flexibility the iPad gives me to use all three ebook stores, I still find many books that are not available. Until they are, I am certainly not interested in spending the additional money for a seperate e-reader unless i can eliminate my paper book collection altogether.And one other thing that really pisses me off about e-book sales. A lot of the magazines are going to offer or already offer electronic formats of their publications, which I really like. But if magazine companies want to really do something awesome, they should give their current subscribers a way to login to their account online to verify who they are and then automatically send an electronic version for free when they purchase a subscription to the paper version. I subscribe to four magazines, and most offer an electronic version. But they are charging as much for a single issue as I paid for an entire year subscription to the paper version. I would love for PopSci to have an app that would auto download when they mail the paper version so I could read it on here, or at least go through the issue briefly to find the articles I am most interested in before it arrives. That would be a good way to get more subscribers and keep churn down, in my opinion.
11/19/2010 11:12:25 AM
^^ I don't know if I'm in the minority but agree that I'm definitely not in the majority. I also agree about the book light being a solution but so would cutting the lights on. Either way I'm still sitting there reading too long in low light before turning them on or getting the light. Glare is an issue but it's rare enough that it's problematic that it doesn't bother me much. As for the net book I'll have to politely disagree. The ones that I've owned (I've owned several before the iPad) are slower with a near unusable resolution and you often have to put up with a device that feels cheap, has a bad trackpad, and usually has worse battery life. I work in design and neither a net book or iPad will run some of my programs (though Autodesk did just release an autocad app that I haven't tried yet) so I have to do them remotely. A vertical res of 600 just plain doesn't work. But again, to each their own.^ digital magazines are currently a joke. I have about 10 subscriptions right between industry stuff and my personal mags and most of them offer some kind of digital mag that will work with the iPad (either app or zinio). I've contacted them about switching and they can't help me because I didn't pay for my subscription through them. Instead I have to contact the people that have nothing to do with the magazines' production or distribution to see if they can help. Of course they tell me what I expect already and that they don't have anything to do with the type of sub I have. It's ridiculous.
11/19/2010 12:13:23 PM
11/19/2010 12:29:47 PM
^Maybe digital magazines that you might see on the shelf at a Food Lion, but there's a huge market for academic use--research journals, fiction journal, arts magazines (well, writing) they're all relatively low-key with the graphics and all have PDF versions, which is pretty awesome to me. I even looked a PC Gamer PDF mag on the the new Kindle, and outside of the color being zapped out of it, was still cool. For me, using it to read academic journals is going to be pretty important.And damnit I didn't want this to be debating the use of an e-reader. We've had others threads that talk about the feasibility of a devoted e-reader compared to tablets and netbooks. I think we're all aware of e-reader, netbook, tablet alternatives people. Personally I have what's been called the best netbook on the market, so I would not call them "cheap or underperforming", and since I have a great netbook I'm not really considering iPad. I would love one but it's not really an option for me right now (cost or practicality, not that all my reasons for wanting an e-reader are practical).I really would like to keep it to "competitive features between e-readers", though yes I understand iPad has several advantages (but it's not an e-reader, it's a tablet alternative).EDIT: Currently trying to find a list of magazines for Nook Color.[Edited on November 19, 2010 at 1:04 PM. Reason : f]
11/19/2010 12:51:02 PM
^ I'm talking about digital mags as an industry. I greatly prefer them to print but the publishers haven't figured the whole thing out yet. Basically I was agreeing with and expanding on nighthawk's comments. Also, best buy will have the nook for $99 on black Friday.
11/19/2010 6:55:44 PM
Yea, but aren't they supposed to have the older generation, not the new one?
11/19/2010 7:04:55 PM
There's only one "Nook". "Nook Color" is the new one coming out which is more of a tablet. Kindle is the one with multiple generations (3 for the Kindle and 2 for the Kindle DX).[Edited on November 19, 2010 at 7:24 PM. Reason : .]
11/19/2010 7:24:17 PM
Oh, I could swear the regular Nook had a second generation earlier this year, guess not. It seems to me like unless you're getting a Nook Color that the current-gen Kindle is the forerunner in terms of what most people/critics are saying. I don't know, I think I just need to go play with a Kindle.
11/19/2010 11:08:18 PM
Yeah pretty much. Go to best buy. They should have the nook, kindle 3, and at least one of the Sony models on display.
11/20/2010 7:03:59 AM
11/20/2010 9:18:41 AM
Can you do the same thing with the ipad nook app?
11/21/2010 6:10:23 PM
11/22/2010 3:17:47 PM
I LOOOOVE my kindle. It's the generation before this, but it's still awesome. I chose it over the nook because at the time Amazon had more to offer at cheaper prices. also:
11/22/2010 8:15:00 PM
my wife gave me the 3G kindle for my birthday the more i use it, the more i like it over the nooki've already jailbroken it and installed the screensaver and fonts hacks, though it would be really cool if there was an option to set the screensaver to your current book's cover automaticallyi don't know that i ever would have spent $60 on the amazon-brand leather cover and light myself (it was a gift from my parents), but i DO like it...i like that the integrated light is unobtrusive and gets its power directly from the kindle instead of requiring additional batteries...i DON'T like that it's relatively heavy and thick (which can also be good, i suppose, since it provides solid protection)...my biggest complaint is probably the elastic cord and leather tab that's use to secure the case closed because i can see it wearing out and becoming useless over time...that said, i haven't found any other cases with integrated reading lights (even if they require an extra battery)
11/23/2010 1:39:58 PM
I have a collection of epub books but amazon makes it so easy to purchase books and share them on one account that I just buy all my books now through Amazon. My dad just retired and reads a lot and we have similar interests so I'm on his account and just get suggestions from him about what books to read and they're already archived. It's sweet.
11/23/2010 2:24:49 PM
I didn't even realize you could jailbreak a Kindle.
11/23/2010 3:07:59 PM
11/23/2010 3:18:45 PM
11/23/2010 3:51:24 PM
^don't need to jailbreak to read epubs. While the kindle doesn't naively read epubs you can just convert them using Calibre and transfer them to a non-jailbroken Kindle.
11/23/2010 3:56:53 PM
11/23/2010 4:03:00 PM
11/23/2010 7:52:16 PM
11/24/2010 8:07:49 AM
ah...so you CAN use EPUBs on a kindle 3: http://www.mobileread.com/forums/showthread.php?t=107371since i've never checked out digital books from the library, though, i don't know if this will allow for that (which is my only reason for caring about EPUB support)
11/24/2010 9:15:47 AM
If you're open to "older" tech then Amazon is selling the Kindle 2 for $89 starting at noon on Friday. It's limited numbers and when I compared my K3 to my Dad's K2, I really preferred the 3. That said, $50 would have possibly changed my mind.http://gizmodo.com/5698212/amazon-black-friday-kindle-2-for-89
11/24/2010 10:28:54 AM
if anyone has a kindle and is interested in dual-booting WITHOUT jailbreaking OR removing/damaging/hacking the vanilla kindle OS, there is duokanhttp://www.mobileread.com/forums/showthread.php?t=105847http://flip.netzbeben.de/2010/11/duokan-available-with-english-gui-today/it's only been around for about 3 weeks, apparently, so i'll probably give it a bit of time before giving it a shot (and i still don't know if i can borrow digital books from the library)...but it's out there
11/24/2010 2:55:36 PM
11/26/2010 12:31:33 AM
i think you can still get the refurbished nook 3G for $86http://slickdeals.net/forums/showthread.php?t=2416191for $100 less than the kindle 3G, it's a pretty good deal, IMO...though i didn't realize that you can't use the 3G for web browsing (which would be a deal breaker for me, since i don't see the point of having 3G if you can't surf teh intarwebs even using a slow browser and e-ink screen)[Edited on November 26, 2010 at 11:12 AM. Reason : .]
11/26/2010 11:10:08 AM
So, I finally went and had an extended play with some top e-readers. I tested out the Nook Color, Nook Wi-Fi, Kindle 3 Wi-Fi, and some Sony e-reader that was more expensive and not very good. I'd played with a regular Nook before. It's fun after I played even 15 minutes with the Kindle I couldn't bring comparison. I know it's a newer device, but the Kindle 3 was considerably faster, smoother, and I appreciated having a hard home and back button. The Nook felt really unwieldy and it was hard to know if it was responding to my touch sometimes.Nook and Kindle 3 were kind of ruined in my mind after playing with the Nook Color though. Nook Color is lightning fast, the picture was amazing, and the sample magazines were a ton of fun read. The browser was fast and I read some new updates on CNN with ease (and in great resolution). I'm seriously considering it, even though I have a pretty strict personal policy about electronic devices in their first generation (if you consider the Nook Color a separate product line, and I do).
11/26/2010 2:45:22 PM
^ realize, though, that with the nook color, you're really talking about a cheaper alternative to an ipad as opposed to an ebook reader...i think that the problem with the nook color is that you sacrifice everything that makes a "real" ereader so awesome (high-contrast/low-glare e-ink screen and subsequently spectacular battery life) and lose that which makes the ipad so awesome (great screen, flexibility, reasonably powerful for what it is, reasonably good battery life)it's an okay in-between device, i guess, but you're still getting a lot of glare because of the touchscreen, battery life that's worse than both ereaders AND the ipad, and something less functional than an ipad (but more so than an ereader)http://www.engadget.com/2010/11/16/nook-color-review/*shrug*
11/26/2010 6:00:37 PM
out of stock!
11/26/2010 6:10:23 PM
Almost picked up the Nook for 73 shipped, but the 10 off paypal coupon didn't work on my account. I decided not to pull the trigger @83. :/
11/26/2010 7:39:02 PM
^^I don't very much agree with the shortcomings from the iPad, and I've read plenty of good reviews. It's a good "e-reader focused tablet alternative"--obviously an iPad is way better though in terms of tablet performance, but the Nook Color still has a market and for me I like it.And the lack of 3G doesn't bother me in the slightest, I have no intention to need 3G even if I had an iPad. I live in Raleigh and commute to campus and downtown--it's the most wired city in America. There's free wi-fi everywhere. I'm really just not worried about needing 3G.
11/26/2010 7:59:12 PM
Question: on the Kindle 3G, is web browsing still free in 100 countries? I know the web browser sucks, is slow and painful to use on an e-ink display, but free lifetime web access sounds well worth the $50 premium. Any Kindle 3G owners wish to verify this? If you are willing to suffer, could you check your gmail in Berlin?
11/27/2010 9:22:09 AM
^3G browsing is possible on it. I have no idea whether it's still worldwide or not though (not sure whether you'll find any wolfwebbers overseas that also happen to have a k3).
11/27/2010 10:37:07 AM
11/27/2010 11:06:44 AM
I use my iPad 24/7 and it goes 16 hours + a day with never once hitting the "Low Battery" point.Charging is not a big deal either. Just hook it up when I go to bed, as it is my alarm clock, and its ready to roll next morning. But again, I can't justify spending $500 on this and spending the extra cash to carry a separate device just to read books on. I never read outside and the eye strain is no issue to me.
11/27/2010 12:26:18 PM
11/27/2010 7:21:43 PM
^Lowest I've seen is basically 6 hours when gizmodo tested it. People often get 11-12 hours straight on video during tests. Real life usage is 8+ (sure as hell not 5). While we're being realistic, you're not reading much if you charge every 3 weeks. I was charging every 3-5 days with the k3 an it get better life than the k2 or my nook. Moving from 3-5 days to 1-2 days is really not a big deal IMO. Also, we get it. The iPad is not as good an e-reader as an actual e-reader for many people. Nobody is arguing that it is. For some of us it's just as good. It also often a better value (multi-use device vs. Single use or bulk of multiples). The value of both is getting worse IMO with the intro of the nook color.[Edited on November 27, 2010 at 8:06 PM. Reason : .]
11/27/2010 8:05:19 PM
@quagmire02I don't know what reviews you're reading, the only bad ones I saw were speculative articles from before it came out. The Engadget review for it was still overall positive, and there's been several articles questioning that the Nook Color, as an Android Tablet, may be a huge competitor for the iPad. But you're right, it's not a proper e-reader competitor because (in Engadget's words) it "broke the silent vow between e-readers to keep the technology centered on long-term availability and niche service", not multi-purpose.But I really don't care because I don't want either. Well, I wanted a Nook Color for about 24 hours, but now I'm back to not caring about it. You're right that for a dedicated e-reader it's just not the same. I'm back to wanting a Kindle (3) Wi-Fi now, the practicality, price and quality makes a lot more sense.Right now I'm looking into how fesible it is to use the Kindle experimental browser to get to some PDF files and journals I read (research journals, articles, library reserve files).
11/27/2010 8:06:24 PM