I've not tried the nook, but, of the Kindle and Sony, I definitely prefer the Sony. That's the one I own. I have three friends that have also purchased a Sony after playing with mine, too, and that's after they each checked out a Kindle from our university library for a few days.
In my opinion, the Sony Reader's build quality and general heft (metal casing) is much nicer than the Kindle. The buttons are also laid out much more nicely (you heard right about the Kindle being annoying in that respect). Other things the Sony has going for it are open formats (PDF, ePUB, etc) and far and away the best general management software with Calibre (library organization and book format converter).
Anyway, I can't comment on the Nook, but I'd strongly recommend the Sony over the Kindle, if there's not some important reason that you're leaving it out.
In my opinion, the Sony Reader's build quality and general heft (metal casing) is much nicer than the Kindle. The buttons are also laid out much more nicely (you heard right about the Kindle being annoying in that respect). Other things the Sony has going for it are open formats (PDF, ePUB, etc) and far and away the best general management software with Calibre (library organization and book format converter).
Anyway, I can't comment on the Nook, but I'd strongly recommend the Sony over the Kindle, if there's not some important reason that you're leaving it out.
From what I could tell, it was around $100 more, with nothing that really stood out to distinguish it from the others. I'd like to go as cheap as I can, but the $99 Alurtek lite and others just didn't cut it.
As to your specific question about the internet, yes, that's a huge gimmick at the moment. The refresh rate on e-ink screens is simply too slow. You MIGHT be able to get away with reading some RAFO posts, but general browsing is just too frustrating, as you can't do anything smooth, like, for example, scrolling. Any action you try to do takes between 0.5 and 1.5 seconds to actually show up on the screen, depending on how much of the screen you want to refresh. It's just not a good option at this point.
That's about what I thought the internet would be like. Oh well, it's not a big deal.
"And it breaks my heart to look around, and see the unimpressed; who can't believe the emperor is dressed"~Fastball
2-7-1
2-7-1
Kindle or Nook?
09/11/2010 01:56:02 AM
- 791 Views
Kindle is all DRM. For that reason, I'm wary.
09/11/2010 02:01:52 AM
- 499 Views
unless you're into uncommon titles and textbooks, I don't see why one needs Amazon's market.
09/11/2010 03:48:01 AM
- 501 Views
I simply ADORE my NOOK
09/11/2010 03:46:19 AM
- 569 Views
Why. Why the capitalization. Don't buy into their sales pitch, man! *NM*
09/11/2010 06:16:23 AM
- 217 Views
Is the type pad extra slow? Or is it just as good as the average touchscreen?
09/11/2010 10:08:48 PM
- 450 Views
The touch pad is a bit slow, but it's never detracted from the performance for me
09/11/2010 10:53:58 PM
- 507 Views
i <3 my kindle.... haven't felt limited by anything about it yet.
09/11/2010 05:50:19 AM
- 495 Views
May I ask why the Sony Reader isn't under consideration?
09/11/2010 06:22:51 AM
- 595 Views
Price, mainly
09/11/2010 09:57:34 PM
- 443 Views
Thanks for the replies
09/11/2010 10:11:41 PM
- 484 Views