Recommendations for eBook reader devices, please
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domi@lemmy.secnd.mereplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
I ordered from the US store and paid 530€. Still expensive of course and it comes without warranty but it is cheaper and in stock.
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yingwu@lemmy.dbzer0.comreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
If one doesn't want telemetry etc being sent to Rakuten.
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yingwu@lemmy.dbzer0.comreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
Yeah if the library supports Overdrive, it's possible. I've used it and it seemed to work fine.
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ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.comreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
I got a Kobo and just use the networking to sync Pocket articles. Stock system.
I don’t even think an account is available in my country. Just been syncing over Calibre. It’s not perfect (it uses a community plugin) but once you get the quirks of the Calibre-to-Kobo transfer it’s easy enough.
Now the hard part. Actually reading.
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monomon@programming.devreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
+1 for Pocketbook
Never had any issues with it whatsoever.
The device works great with Calibre.
There is some other functionality that I did not use.
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domi@lemmy.secnd.mereplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
I just got the Dandadan opening out of my head, now it's back. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4na2opArGY
How's the manga?
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murmelade@lemmy.mlreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
I read on my phone amoled display in dark mode with the app Cool Reader.
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yingwu@lemmy.dbzer0.comreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
Lol. An e-Reader was actually one of the best purchases I've done. Started reading waaaay more than before. Also great that one can start digesting all those old out-of-copyright ebooks from like standardebooks.org, on a screen that resembles paper. I can never read a book on an ordinary screen.
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passiveaggressivesonar@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
Same here with librera
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hylactor@sopuli.xyzreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
In theory the boox only has wifi. Presumably you could never connect it to anything, even by usb, if you loaded your books onto an sd card.
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engineergaming@feddit.nlreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
To my knowledge, they don't have SD cards - but indeed, you could just load books by wire.
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pinerune@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
It seems they took some liberties to do more cool action scenes that weren't in the manga. Otherwise it seems almost the same content-wise so far. I like the way Momo looks in the manga; she seems more lighthearted at times.
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hylactor@sopuli.xyzreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
Mine definitely does. Micro SD.
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subiacosb@lemmy.mlreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
You page loads up then it goes away. Not sure what’s up. Maybe it’s my ad blockers. Who knows.
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domi@lemmy.secnd.mereplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
Which browser do you use? The only issue I'm aware of is that the videos don't load on Firefox for Android.
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aghastghast@programming.devreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
I can't speak to the privacy of it, but I love my Kobo Elipsa 2E setup. I've got NickelMenu, Synching and Autoshelf installed, so I can sort books by directory and have them sync. I also have KOReader installed with some other goodies, but rarely use it. The reading experience in the stock firmware is way nicer. And the screen is big enough to read full size PDFs comfortably. Kobo runs Linux under the hood, and there are extensions to give you Telnet/SSH access so you can mod what you need.
Also, being able to borrow books from Overdrive/Libby on it and support my local library is rad.
I did the whole Calibre with Kobo extensions thing for a few weeks, but it just didn't work out very well for me. I like to have my books synced to multiple devices and Calibre just isn't built for that.
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skarn@discuss.tchncs.dereplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
AFAICT currently Tolino is just a rebranded Kobo.
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redex68@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
Haven't tried any other similar product (except the pro version), but I have the Remarkable 2 and in my experience it's pretty good as an e reader as well. Maybe expensive for just using it as an e-reader but you can also use it as a note taking device. It's pretty big but still really thin and light, so it's a pretty good reading experience especially if you have bigger hands, some people may find it too big as an e-reader tho, but I really like the size.
One recommendation I can make is that if you are interested in it, if you have the money consider the pro version. If notetaking matters to you, the little I experienced writing on the pro version was so much better. The pen is much better as well as the tracking. My version tends to be off by about a millimeter at some places and the edges. This becomes extremely frustrating when you're trying to e.g. dot the i-s and you keep missing where you want to write. From what I saw, the pro version is much better at this and is in colour.
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z3ror0ne@lemmy.mlreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
Sorry to hear that. I'll admit I don't buy ebooks. Yoho yoho and all that. And yeah, I also never turn on wifi. Have you tried a hard reset?
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ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.comreplied to Guest 27 days ago last edited by
I still prefer paper, although not having to store moisture-sensitive fragile things is nice. So is the fact that I can read books that are out of print or hard to find (or banned, yay Middle East), even if fumbling with PDFs isn’t wonderful on the device.
And of course, the obvious: downloading them for free. Which is always ethical when Routledge wants to charge you 85$ for a scholarly work of which the author doesn’t see a dollar.
44/98