Quote:
Originally Posted by jswinden
 Add another +1! I don't even want to know how much money I've spent on readers!
- Quite a few PalmOS and WM PDAs during the pre-eInk reader era.
- Kindles owned: K2, two K3's (gifted one), K4NT, KT, KF.
- Sonys owned: Bookman in 1992, PRS505, PRS300, PRS600, PRS900, PRS350, PRS950. (Our Penguin troll would be proud of this.)
- Kobo Touch.
- And some early tablets.
Yes I know, I need help... 
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If you need help getting rid of them I'd be happy to take them off of your hands!
I also do not regret even a penny of the money that I have spent on ebook readers. The enjoyment that they have given me is priceless.
Quote:
Originally Posted by HarryT
Sorry, Jack, but I'm a little puzzled by this. You claim that the touchscreen on the PRS-350 and 650 "noticeably degraded the contrast". These devices have IR touchscreens, just like the Kindle Touch does. There is no physical layer on top of the screen to degrade the image. Can you explain, please, what the mechanism is by which it's degraded? I have a Sony PRS-350 and the screen quality appears excellent to me.
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I'm unsure of what was meant by the degraded contrast as well - my PRS-350 has the best e-ink screen I've ever seen.