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Hypntick wrote: » I looked at the kindle DX, it is quite nice. However, hands down, the nook color wins the PDF war. Even with it's native pdf viewer you have many options for text size etc. I did make the purchase originally as an e-reader however there is a whole community out there who has rooted the device to make it more or less a complete android tablet. Also price wise, it really can't be beat.
cabrillo24 wrote: » Depends on the usage. If someone wants to read outside E-Ink is better than an LCD in light, and the battery life on a Kindle is amazing (30 days for regular Kindle) 2-3 weeks for DX. But if you don't plan on taking it outside, the Nook color is a good alternative as it's cheaper than the DX, however the screen size is a little smaller. I was just thinking this very second about the con of owning a Nook or even an iPad as a reader....because it would be so easy to get distracted and not focus on the reading portion. Today I was in my den, reading George Bush's Decision Points (my iphone and laptop upstairs) and with no distractions got about 2 hours worth of reading in. I couldn't imagine doing that on a tablet, too easy to start doing something else.
Hypntick wrote: » the nook color wins the PDF war.
mikej412 wrote: » Personally I think my desktop with 26" monitor wins the PDF war -- but for extended READING and portability I'll use my Kindle DX. For reading at night in the dark I'll use the 10" Android tablet.
rogue2shadow wrote: » +1 for grabbing a kindle. I'm thinking about a DX soon but my only concern is it being too big maybe?
cabrillo24 wrote: » I prefer purchasing my books via Kindle as its a lot easier to carry around. However, for the price you're willing to pay, why not just go for an iPad? It handles PDF's a lot better, and also does a lot more? Are you looking to use the Kindle outside more? E-Ink is a very nice feature. I would get a Kindle DX, but I'm waiting for the price to drop as it's too close to the price of an iPad right now.
cabrillo24 wrote: » I was just thinking this very second about the con of owning a Nook or even an iPad as a reader....because it would be so easy to get distracted and not focus on the reading portion. Today I was in my den, reading George Bush's Decision Points (my iphone and laptop upstairs) and with no distractions got about 2 hours worth of reading in. I couldn't imagine doing that on a tablet, too easy to start doing something else.
Hypntick wrote: » when it comes to a standard novel I always prefer to buy a copy of the book. Just love the smell of em for some reason.
aquilla wrote: » Quoting previous people, I feel a 6" screen is too small for reading PDFs. I was in my local Waterstones (book shop in the UK) and they had the a Sony 6" reader on display. It was fine to read an ordinary book but I feel reading a PDF would have been a struggle.
varelg wrote: » you'll hit the PDF wall on eReaders- and the IT kind of pdf's isn't just same-old same-old plain text and few pics, on the contrary, it may contain plenty of tables, graphs, charts, bullet points, special text formatting and each and every one of these eReaders tends to turn such pdf's into a chopped salad, finely mix it and then display it to you to leave you absolutely clueless as you try to read those PDF's.
varelg wrote: » At some point aquilla, you'll hit the PDF wall on eReaders- and the IT kind of pdf's isn't just same-old same-old plain text and few pics, on the contrary, it may contain plenty of tables, graphs, charts, bullet points, special text formatting and each and every one of these eReaders tends to turn such pdf's into a chopped salad, finely mix it and then display it to you to leave you absolutely clueless as you try to read those PDF's. I bought nook just for the eInk screen and connection to B&N store but also for storing and reading various PDF's. Everything else works but PDF's with just a tad more complex formatting than plain text- bullet points fall apart, tables are disassembled etc. From what I read from owners of other eReaders with eInk, no improvement there either. The only eInk reader that LOOKS promising with complex PDF's is Sony PRS 950 but I am not going to go on a crusade for That Perfect Ereader and buy every new toy that comes on the market. Rumor has it that a color eInk reader (with the screen size in A4 format, which alegedly improves PDF rendering on eInk screen) is due to hit the market in Japan in the first quarter of next year, so if you haven't got an eReader yet, holding off for just a bit may be a very smart thing. I deliberately failed to mention backlit screen eReaders, not my liking...
mikej412 wrote: » I haven't seen one of those on my DX. Do you have an example -- maybe a corporate report, SEC financial reports or filings, some vendor product specifications or data sheet?
varelg wrote: » Not necessarily of that level of complexity but here's an example that I'd like to read but is garbled when on Nook. Pick any PDF in that collection and watch how tables are broken and formatting lost... As far as I know aquilla, officially nook is US- only (so far), although in my opinion it should work anywhere as long as you don't depend fully on B&N shop since it connects quite easily with PC's and has wi-fi capability.
Bokeh wrote: » I wish they would let retailers carry this model, so folks could see it first hand before ordering it.
erpadmin wrote: » Is there an upgrade program that would allow me to trade in my Kindle 2, and just pay the difference? Or am I pretty much stuck with eBay? Or should I just keep my old Kindle 2 and just drop the $379 or whatever it is for the DX? The bigger screen does scream "buy me" at me....
zerglings wrote: » You won't regret buying the DX. How long have you had your Kindle? As already mentioned, Amazon's 30 days return policy is great.
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