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Right, but I was never under the impression that everyone would be able to access it for free. You can only "sample" books, not read them from cover to cover. You can search within books and access a handful of pages in either direction, but that's all.Sorry if this is too OT, but I just stumbled across this: http://www.overdrive.com/default.aspIt seems to be a bit of a hassle to use, but maybe it has potential.
I guess I'm just not a sunshine guy. To be honest, I bought the iPad for the $30/mo 3G plan, which is cheaper than what you can get for your netbook, and I would own an ebook reader as well, except...I don't need one any more!
No argument from me, there. e-Ink is a phenomenal technology.
My wife has been reading ebooks for years and tried a couple of the early readers, a Sony and one called a Bookman (i think). She purchased a net book as an interim to the Kindle but. No
I was an original Newton user. Had only someone handed me an iPad at the same time....
Remember the college backpack filled with science textbooks like the hunchback remembers Notre Dame. Had only someone handed me a Kindle DX at that time....
The advantage of being made by BN is that you can get help in store and buy wirelessly from BN.
So how easy is it to get a file from your pc to a nook or kindle, a file not purchased from bn or amazon?
For what it's worth, I have both a Kindle DX and an iPad, and since I've gotten the iPad I don't use the Kindle any more. The Kindle app that Amazon made for the iPad is superior in every way to the Kindle device, and the iPad hardware is significantly better as a reader as well:1. The Kindle screen is slightly fuzzy and low contrast. It's very hard to read comfortably without a bright light source, and I do most of my reading indoors or on an airplane. On the beach I don't bring electronics since the salt water mist is deadly to them.2. The iPad screen is sharper than the Kindle, and it provides choices of text contrast (black on white, black on sepia, white on black). The black on sepia (more of a "not quite black" on "slightly off white") is ideal. It has much better contrast than the Kindle e-ink, but it isn't so contrasty that it causes eyestrain.3. The iPad has a backlight adjustable from within the Kindle app. I can read it anywhere and everywhere with perfect lighting. Frankly, in bright light I find the iPad to be fine as well.4. Speed. This is a major difference. The Kindle is extremely slow to react. Even turning a page is tedious, especially after you've used an iPad where everything works smoothly and quickly. I never used any of the extra features on the Kindle (searching, dictionary, footnotes, etc.) because they were so clumsy to use and painfully slow. I use them on the iPad because it's very quick and responsive.5. Color. It's a huge advantage having a color screen. Not only can I much more easily scan through the covers of my books, but I also found that a lot of my books had color images in them that I wasn't seeing on the Kindle.6. Photo quality. Books with photos or diagrams in them display much higher resolution versions on the iPad in almost every case. Illustrations in books on the Kindle typically look crude and pixelated in comparison.7. PDFs and e-books. The iPad let's me read a huge range of material: from the Amazon Kindle store, from the iBook store, PDFs, and e-books (open source format). Of course the iPad also provides offline web pages, Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files, and movies. It's so much more versatile in that regard that there's no comparison.8. Battery life. I've never run into a problem with the iPad's 12-hour battery life. I often get more like 14 hours for something a low demand as reading. If i'm reading for extended periods, I'm always near an outlet. Even on 30-hour trips overseas I haven't run out of iPad battery life given that I'm sleeping and on the move during part of the total time.So, those are my preferences and observations. Happy reading!