They all have some way of organising books to some extent, models like the Cybook Opus, Onyx Book i62HD and Pocketbook readers you can use folders to organise your books like you do with files on your PC, but most of the 'main' e-readers easily available in the UK all use tags from the metadata to sort your books into some sort of collections.
I *think* the Sony readers are generally considered best for organising collections (mainly because they are automatically sorted into collections based on your ebooks metadata, although if you have any books with loads of genres attributed to it in the metadata it can give you loads of different collections - at least that's my experience with my PRS350. I find it both good and bad!).
However, both the Kobo Touch/Glo (shelves) and the Kindle/Kindle PW (collections) work in a similar way. I don't know much about the Kobo other than that it was added as a firmware update at some point, and wasn't initially available on the older Kobo Touch. With the Kindle, you have to register it to activate the collections, but although it doesn't automatically sort your books into collections like the Sony, it's pretty simple to use. Also, if you use Calibre you can utilise a Calibre plugboard to improve the sorting of books into series for example. The Nook I'm not so sure about, I *think* it has the weakest ability in regards collections just going by the few things I've read about it.
So the short answer is, they all support some way of organising your books.
|