I love my e-readers. I've used them for nine years now, and have way more books than I could ever fit on my shelves. At this point I have a couple, different versions of Kindles and a Kobo, and they all have a designated purpose at this point. 🙂
I am a Kobo user for some years now. A feature I appreciate on my Kobo is that I can copy books on it, by sharing my ebooks with friends. Question: is that also possible with a Kindle?
I bought a Kindle because of a certain chess book that didn't exist on paper anymore. At first, I did not like it, because I was not familiar with going back to certain pages. But after a while, I became addicted to it. I think that the major issue about e-readers is the fact that they are "published" after some time and I have to wait 'till they come in digital format.
Bear in mind that I bought the e-reader mentioned in the video in 2017. That said, I have a 10in tablet, and while it might be better for PDFs or manga, in terms of size, I still think 8in is that Goldilocks perfect balance to achieve a true paperback experience in terms of the size of the reading area. But that isn't to say that the Kindle scribe is a less-than-stellar device.. might use is entirely for reading. I don't really do PDFs and nor do I have any interest in the writing experience with a pen.
I love my e-readers. I've used them for nine years now, and have way more books than I could ever fit on my shelves. At this point I have a couple, different versions of Kindles and a Kobo, and they all have a designated purpose at this point. 🙂
I am a Kobo user for some years now. A feature I appreciate on my Kobo is that I can copy books on it, by sharing my ebooks with friends.
Question: is that also possible with a Kindle?
Thank you, I just learned the word "urtext"
I bought a Kindle because of a certain chess book that didn't exist on paper anymore. At first, I did not like it, because I was not familiar with going back to certain pages. But after a while, I became addicted to it. I think that the major issue about e-readers is the fact that they are "published" after some time and I have to wait 'till they come in digital format.
nowadays books that will be sold as physical copies often release Kindle formats as soon as they launch
Loved the video. Well done
Have you tried the Kindle Scribe?
Bear in mind that I bought the e-reader mentioned in the video in 2017. That said, I have a 10in tablet, and while it might be better for PDFs or manga, in terms of size, I still think 8in is that Goldilocks perfect balance to achieve a true paperback experience in terms of the size of the reading area. But that isn't to say that the Kindle scribe is a less-than-stellar device.. might use is entirely for reading. I don't really do PDFs and nor do I have any interest in the writing experience with a pen.