the first outfit to sell a waterproof e-ink reader with an inductive power supply and a wifi connection for under £200 will get my cash. If I can't read the thing in the bath, there's no point for me.
People keep saying this on every ebook thread - "if i drop it in the bath it won't dry out like a book would, so there's no point for me fiddle de dee"
Firstoff, who takes a bath? A bath? Where are you, the 1930s?
Second, who READS in the bath? The water gets cold quickly, and soon you're sitting in cold water holding something that isn't waterproof out of the water (yes, they'll dry out, but try reading the bastard once it's soaked) aching your arm. What kind of masochistic pensionable crank enjoys that?
Showers and ebook readers, or baths, bath salts, pipe, slippers, werthers original, coronary heart disease and death. Your choice. Probably.
I mean there's two places where reading works best, bath and bog. And you can only sit on the bog for so long before the red ring of doom marks your posterior. You can keep topping up the hot water in the bath and the planet be damned.
You can even have a crafty cuppa AND a book in the bath and be warm and naked and happy.
I'm still using a 10 year old Handspring Visor to read. Holds anywhere from 1 to 20 full length novels, and it cost me less than $ 25 american on ebay.
Let those who have too much money get either of these readers, Paris likes mine instead, it leaves more money to spend on her.
Sorry but B&N didnot launch their own eBook site they purchased an allready existing one Fictionwise .com and as a result allsort of restrictoins have been put on what they will sell you.
you can only purchase the full range of titles if you live in the USA.
As a recidivist mature student, this seems like a step in the right direction - an eBook won't become useful to me until I can easily annotate pages, which I would be able to with a decent keyboard. Of course it would also need to be able to offer me digital copies of some of the obscure and very heavy course books I occasionally require for it to become completely useful, and I suspect that won't be for a good while yet.
For the time being, I'll stick to Book 1.0 - it's nice to have at least *something* that doesn't require charging to be useable.
Barnes & Noble preps Kindle punching Google machine
HFoster
"Taiwanese outfit" #
Posted Friday 9th October 2009 11:53 GMT
So, HTC then? At least they have experience with implementing Android. I just hope it doesn't take them 3 iterations to catch the competition.
I love my Hero, but it took the G1 and Magic before HTC got there. Let's hope the B&N reader doesn't take as many iterations.
caffeine addict
said it before... #
Posted Friday 9th October 2009 12:43 GMT
the first outfit to sell a waterproof e-ink reader with an inductive power supply and a wifi connection for under £200 will get my cash. If I can't read the thing in the bath, there's no point for me.
Anonymous Coward
Baths #
Posted Friday 9th October 2009 13:14 GMT
People keep saying this on every ebook thread - "if i drop it in the bath it won't dry out like a book would, so there's no point for me fiddle de dee"
Firstoff, who takes a bath? A bath? Where are you, the 1930s?
Second, who READS in the bath? The water gets cold quickly, and soon you're sitting in cold water holding something that isn't waterproof out of the water (yes, they'll dry out, but try reading the bastard once it's soaked) aching your arm. What kind of masochistic pensionable crank enjoys that?
Showers and ebook readers, or baths, bath salts, pipe, slippers, werthers original, coronary heart disease and death. Your choice. Probably.
Anonymous Coward
@baths #
Posted Friday 9th October 2009 13:31 GMT
Who doesn't read in the bath?
I mean there's two places where reading works best, bath and bog. And you can only sit on the bog for so long before the red ring of doom marks your posterior. You can keep topping up the hot water in the bath and the planet be damned.
You can even have a crafty cuppa AND a book in the bath and be warm and naked and happy.
HFoster
@AC 09/10/09 13:28 GMT #
Posted Friday 9th October 2009 14:01 GMT
Who do you bare your arse to shortly after having released the chocolate hostages?
Yuk!
expat
Who needs it ? #
Posted Friday 9th October 2009 20:58 GMT
I'm still using a 10 year old Handspring Visor to read. Holds anywhere from 1 to 20 full length novels, and it cost me less than $ 25 american on ebay.
Let those who have too much money get either of these readers, Paris likes mine instead, it leaves more money to spend on her.
John Dougald McCallum
Barnes & Nobel #
Posted Friday 9th October 2009 20:58 GMT
Sorry but B&N didnot launch their own eBook site they purchased an allready existing one Fictionwise .com and as a result allsort of restrictoins have been put on what they will sell you.
you can only purchase the full range of titles if you live in the USA.
Mark 133
Some sort of progress #
Posted Monday 12th October 2009 11:51 GMT
As a recidivist mature student, this seems like a step in the right direction - an eBook won't become useful to me until I can easily annotate pages, which I would be able to with a decent keyboard. Of course it would also need to be able to offer me digital copies of some of the obscure and very heavy course books I occasionally require for it to become completely useful, and I suspect that won't be for a good while yet.
For the time being, I'll stick to Book 1.0 - it's nice to have at least *something* that doesn't require charging to be useable.