Quote:
Originally Posted by ZodWallop
Well hey, if we're going by your standards, all ereaders and their attached ecosystems are exactly the same and there's no objective difference between any of them.
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I laid out different features, which Nook lagged behind the others in adding. They eventually did add them. They were the first between them and Kindle to add the light, possibly the first to do so commercially I can't recall right now.
My point is that each of the three biggies with ecosystems (Nook, Kindle, Kobo) have all added hardware features the others had to play catch up with. They've all been the best at one thing or another.
You are the one who claimed Nook has universally had better hardware, and haven't presented anything other than the current generation to back that claim. And even with the current generation Nook is as ever hardware lite in terms of its offerings. The single model they offer may be good, but they aren't versatile.
Which is where Kobo, and Kindle shine, they have a ereader that's right for you, rather than one which you work around.