Quote:
Originally Posted by John F
I was in the market for a larger reader, and settled for a Sage. If the Elipsa had the the 2E features, it would have been my purchase instead of a Sage.
I thought there were two consumer versions of the H2O: the H2O and the H2O2. One of them had a manufacturing change, but it was still the same consumer model name.
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I have Elipsa and Sage. The Sage is better for epubs and notes (I only use Advancesd) due to size & weight. Only need Elipsa for a few PDFs.
I like the comfort light, and the Elipsa is a bit heavy, but I'd not buy an "upgrade" for those reasons. I'd rather wait for a larger than 10.3″ Kobo with 220 to 300 dpi. The best current 13+″ eink are too low a resolution at 1650 x 2200 thus about 202 to 207 dpi (earlier models are 1200 × 1600 at 150 dpi, the DX(G) also 150dpi, which I have and is far too low). Sony DPT-RP1 was 2017 and £850 then. The Onyx Boox Max 3 is/was probably better.
https://www.thestyleinspiration.com/...one-is-better/ The 13.8″ eink tablets were about twice what I was prepared to pay apart from originally far too poor, though the later 1650 x 2200 is nearly good enough.
I think the Boox Max 3 is only available S/H or refurbished. The Mira seems to be the same panel but only a monitor.
So I'll wait for a larger than 10.3″ eink with 220 dpi or more. I seriously considered a Kindle Scribe but the walled garden PDF support is a complete no and the 227 dpi to 300 dpi change isn't worth it for my eyesight. Having PDFs actual 1:1 with print size is more use now that I have the Kobo Sage. Scribe: spending £335 for about 25% extra sharpness and totally inferior GUI and features or about £300 for a version 2 Elipsa when I have a hardly used Elipsa isn't worth it.
So I'll use the Sage and wait for a serious upgrade (bigger than 12″ and at least 220 dpi) at an affordable price. My latest 23″ 4K screen is nearly as good as eink and HDR colour, so not too bad for larger documents. It's sufficiently high resolution to give better results with text using greyscale anti-aliasing rather than compromise subpixel (RGB cleartype idea) addressing.