The hands-on is a great idea. Only you can say whether the very limited font/line spacing/margin choices on a Kindle will drive you up the wall or suit you fine, and whether the marginally slower page turns on a Kobo are slow enough to bother you. (Check with kepubs, not epubs.)
Kobos work fine out of the box, but have many more fine tuning options available than Kindles. If that's your jam, they're great - I love my H2O. If you want the "it just works" option with very limited fine tuning/collections management etc, Kindle could work for you too.
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