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All readers will have the 30k free books from the Guttenberg Press. I have been researching all of those plus the HP Slate because my wife wanted a reader. I gotta say the Ipad wont do multi tasking and is costly. The slate looks good but no idea when it comes out and it has free 3g.
She also likes to give books she bought to others, which again isn't possible with these. Free books might help to convince her, though.
Things like the Nook and Kindle have always seemed to be overpriced to me, because they are basically methods of selling you more books, and trying to make sure you won't be buying books from some other bookstore.
The exception might be the Kindle DX, it has a much larger display. However, I haven't had a chance to try the DX or a Kindle 2 yet. Also, I'm not a fan of any closed architecture.
I've tried the B&N Nook, the Sony Reader and the Sony Touch. The biggest issue I have with them is that the screen is too small. Even with the text size at the smallest setting they can't display the equivalent of one mass market paperback page of text. I was able to confirm this with the Nook, because I found the same book that was on the demo unit in the store and compared the same page from the Nook and the paperback to each other. Also, when reading a physical book, two pages are always visible, except perhaps at chapter breaks. So the e-readers displays less than half of what a paperback book does.What this means is that you are advancing the pages constantly. Yes, it is just a button push or a finger swipe, but it takes about 1.5 seconds for each page to turn and for the text to stabilize. That may not seem like a long time, until you've had to do it 100 times in an hour of reading. I continually lost the flow of the demo book(s) I tried to read when I was evaluating the readers and it became incredibly annoying.The exception might be the Kindle DX, it has a much larger display. However, I haven't had a chance to try the DX or a Kindle 2 yet. Also, I'm not a fan of any closed architecture.
George,Have you commited 100% to the Kindle or do you read books while at home and not traveling?
I read books and use the Kindle. I am not committed 100% in either direction.George
I thought the Kindle supported a few public formats, and allowed you to upload your own files to the device using a USB cable? That's about as open as I would expect for this kind of device. It looks like the Nook is about the same in this respect.