Thank you cybmole for more needless and unhelpful snark.
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Originally Posted by cybmole
PS I am not being awkward for the sake of it, but neither I, nor my dictionaries, nor google can fathom the significant differences between:
generic Android-tablets, as opposed to
generic-Android tablets
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My point was that there is a
difference between a
specialised for-eReading (e.g. by eInk screen, inclusion of eReading apps by default) tablet that runs generic Android (as opposed to a purposefully neutered and locked down version of Android) and a generic tablet (which can be used to watch videos, play games etc) which runs Android. The former are frequently, and perfectly legitimately, referred to as "eReaders" by many, the latter are not. (I would also note that neither dictionaries nor Google place any particular emphasis on English grammar which, particularly with hyphenation, allows for a degree of specificity in how modifers, such as "generic" and "Android" nest to the root noun.)
Quote:
PS I'd like to see a screenshot of any reader app showing a full blown + easy to browse windows-style folder/subfolder arrangement, from within the app. I am not saying that such a thing does not exist, just that I have never seen one, & I have tested pretty much every epub reader app in the amazon & google app stores.
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1) Given nobody claimed "a full blown + easy to browse windows-style folder/subfolder arrangement",
nobody is obliged to provide you with screenshots of one. (I would also point out that expecting such behaviour from earlier eReaders, that lacked even a touchscreen, is not just unreasonable, but downright absurd.) All that was claimed was that many had a (often simple and basic) file manager already built in, without needing rooting and installation to add this functionality. Addendum: likewise nobody suggested that this functionality existed "within the app", rather than as part of the OS.
2) Given that the previously-cited (and easily findable on the Web) manuals for the T62(+) and the C67 (both of which are
current models) explicitly discuss their file manager, and as the 'eBook Reader Matrix' allude to this type of behaviour for numerous other eReaders by listing them as having the 'folders' feature, I would suggest that
further evidence is unnecessary.