Quote:
Originally Posted by salamanderjuice
There's the same number of pixels on a 7.8" 300 DPI device as the 10.3" Kobo Elipsa. There's more pixels on a 300 DPI 6" eReader than the original 10" iPad or Kindle DX.
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And the Sage is better for some PDFs than any older eink except maybe the Scribe. I nearly bought a Scribe and didn't because of the stupid KFX walled garden on PDF annotation and secondly it's MTP. That was before D&T ended.
I agreed some A4 do work, even on 6" screens. But it's delusional to claim even the majority of magazines and A4 work on eink 7.8", 8" and 10.3". I still have all three of those those sizes.
I read novels on eink, mostly 8", but 4:3 at 5", 6, 6.8, 7 and 7.8 inch work well too. I have or have had all of those in eink. I found the DXG, Elipsa, reMarkable, Nxtpaper 11 and Nxtpaper 14 too awkward for reading regular reflowable novels. The DXG was bought in an Amazon International bargain sale for PDFs, and it's the worst ereader I ever bought, no matter what you use it for. The K3 is better for novels and even the PW3 is better for PDFs than the DXG. I nearly bought a Sony DPT 13.x" ink tablet and later a higher resolution Fujitsu version. I'm very glad I didn't.
EDIT
The 14.25" TCL NxtPaper 14 is the first portable device I've had or seen that works for all magasines, scanned books and A4. The Nxtpaper 11 (10.9") is better than Sage for those but still not good enough.
I've also compared the current 10" approx iPad, Sage, Elipsa and Nxtpaper 11 side by side. The Sage was best if the document suited it, otherwise the Nxtpaper 11 was better. The Nxtpaper 14 is far better than Nxtpaper 11, except for notes. The Sage is best for reflowable mono novels. The iPad was worst due to shine.