Choosing an eBook Reader
Posted on | May 22, 2009 | 5 Comments
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I’m still at Oracle, but they’ve given us a break. So I opened up my RSS Reader and the first thing in the list is the WIRED Gadget Lab article, a Building Guide: How to Choose an eBook Reader. I won’t be buying one anytime soon, but I know that they have increased in popularity over the last many months. As the article opens…
E-books are the ‘it’ gadget of the year. But picking an e-book reader is more difficult than choosing a brand of cereal or a bottle of shampoo. Every other week, a new reader is gussied up in the factories of Taiwan, ready to make its debut. At last count, we estimated at least 12 different e-book readers on the market or close to release.
A matrix for comparison is also linked from the article.
So if this is something you’ve been lusting for, this Gadget Lab report may be helpful.

The Choosing an eBook Reader by 2¢ Worth, unless otherwise expressly stated, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.





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I just read another blog today mentioning the new Kindle DX. http://mostateteachers.typepad.com/missouri_state_teachers_a/2009/05/kindle-dx-reading-motivator.html My response was that for $400 you can buy a netbook with the same size screen and you can do a lot more with it than just read books. Sure…for the price of all the textbooks a student carries you could pay for an e-book reader, but with the same money, you could make it much more interactive with a netbook computer. A textbook on a screen is still a textbook. The students need to interact with and create the content if they are to learn at a higher level. If we’re trying to push more technology into the classroom, the Kindle and other e-book readers are not the way to do it.
Reply to James SiglerIf you already have an iPhone or iPod touch, don’t overlook the Kindle app. Even though the screen is small, I find it very easy to read. You can change the size of the font, and the newest version allows for viewing in landscape mode. I love the fact that I always have a book with me (on my iPhone), so I find myself reading more now than I have in years!
Reply to Tammy WorcesterI agree, James. One of the reasons I love Diigo so much is that my personally learning style is suited to taking notes *on* what I’m reading. There were so many times pre-Diigo that I would bookmark a blog entry, come back later and wonder, “Why did I bookmark this?” If I have to hold an e-reader in one hand a notebook in the other, it’s just not going to work for me. I’ll stress *for me* though, as I realize others have different learning styles from mine.
Reply to Russ GoerendI should add that some of these have note-taking abilities, I’m just not sure how well they would work for me.
So, basically, I opened my big mouth before fully researching. Sorry.
Reply to Russ GoerendI have to agree with #1. Netbooks make e-book readers obsolete unless the reader can fit in your pocket. Since plenty of phones can work as e-book readers it makes since to get a phone that can perform that function.
I have an Archos PMA400 that I use as an e-book reader. It fits in my pocket.
All of these devices are von Neumann machines. It is just a question of how big they are, how poweful they are and what peripheral devices are attached.
These netbooks are THREE TIMES as powerful as an IBM 3033 mainframe that cost $3,000,000 in 1978 so all of these people talking about netbooks being limited are spewing nonsense. Yeah, a quad-core desktop is more powerful but how many people actually know how to do anything that needs that much power besides playing some time wasting games?
Reply to psikeyhackr