Quote:
Originally Posted by billsmith008
2) As a PDF reader it's "OK." It works in the most basic sense of the word. If you have as many pdfs as I do the Onxy N96 does not let you put groups of similar pdfs into folders. So they're all lose in the main library. Many pdfs it couldn't open. One of my huge book scans has over 30 separate pdfs that are sections of the chapters of the book. So having these lose in the library was a deal breaker. Speed of brining up the pdfs was too slow also. The editing ability was primative compared to GoodREader in my opnion. It was like taking a step back in time. The value of the e-ink just couldn't out weigh this.
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You've expressed perfectly why I too stick with GoodReader on my iPad Air 2, Bill. I need the folder capability that GoodReader offers, and the ability to rapidly flip between documents using the tabbed interface when doing research work. Unfortunately eInk devices aren't up there with it yet. As soon as they get there, I'll happily switch to using one for PDFs. As things stand at the moment, though, for me it's eInk for novels, but my trusty iPad for PDFs.