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#1 |
Junior Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Fort Worth, TX
Device: Sony PRS-505
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Hi, I've been reading many of the posts here avidly over the past few days, and I have a better idea now of what I want in an ebook reader, but none of the people here have had exactly the same priorities as I have.
I have a few questions, so please help me out on any of them if you can! A few facts: I'm in the US. I also use a Mac, but I can get access to Windows if I have to. I will be reading novels 80% of the time on this (great big long, fantasy ones, usually, and non-fiction maybe 20% of the time). I want to make this ebook reader a replacement for buying books from a bookstore. Priorities (in order of importance)
I don't care about note-taking ability, audio, wifi, or dictionary lookup. I would never use any of those. From my research it seems that I am excluded from:
Please let me know anything I've forgotten, or tell me more about any of the readers. I am open to anything. Please advise; I will be eternally grateful! Last edited by bystander; 04-29-2009 at 08:06 PM. Reason: forgot something |
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#2 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 27376
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Pennsylvania
Device: PRS-505
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I'm almost positive you can convert .LIT into LRF, so I'll say you should go with the Sony 505. Like other readers, you can zoom in sizes (skip the 700 because of the glare). We have quite a few people on here who have a 505 with a Mac, they use Calibre to manage their device, or VMWare. As a PC owner, I can't help you with that, but I do know there is a work around. It has a bookmark function (so does the Kindle), but I personally like that it's easy to move books from the computer to the device without having to worry much about redownloading. You can also put books in collections on the 505.
You probably wouldn't go too wrong with a Kindle either, but I say the Sony because it's cheaper. I'll clarify one thing for you though, no one that I know of on here has reported being charged by Amazon for the ten cents for transfer. I didn't like that either, and they could still decide to charge people for that. The Sony is an excellent device and, with a few adjustments, could do exactly what you want it to do. I don't think you could go wrong. |
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#3 |
reader
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Mississippi, USA
Device: Kindle 3, Kobo Glo HD
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If you LITs are DRM-free then Calibre (has its own forum here) can convert them to MOBI or ePub or LRF. This means that they will work well on all mainstream EInk Readers. If they have DRM, then ConvertLIT can strip the DRM, and it runs on the Mac once you get a key from your Windows PC running MS Reader. If you are not willing to strip DRM (which is thought by some to be illegal in the US) then your DRMed LITs are boat anchors so far as dedicated reqading devices are concerned.
If you eyesight is really bad, then the Cybook may be your best bet, see E-Reader with Biggest Text Size?. However, I suggest waiting until the current MOBI vs ePub issue is sorted out at Bookeen (probably by next week). If your eyesight is only poor, then any EInk Reader is probably ok. You may need a stronger light than for reading paperbacks, but usually it is enough to increase the font size in low light. Amazon does not charge for your own ebooks if you transfer them to the Kindle by USB (the charge, which is now $0.15 per MB, is for wireless download). It only reads MOBI, but Calibre can create those for you. The Kindle's big advantage is the Kindle Store, which is the best single source for US-licensed ebooks. If you want maximum buying convenience the Kindle is the only choice, but it is expensive (Amazon's ebook prices are relatively low though). |
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#4 |
Resident Curmudgeon
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts
Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3
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The best solution is to wait for one of the readers with a larger then 6 inch screen to come out that fits your needs. The problem with a large enough font is that it doesn't look all that good on a 6 inch screen.
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#5 | ||||||||||
King of the Bongo Drums
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Karma: 5927225
Join Date: Feb 2009
Device: Excelsior! (Strange...)
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[QUOTE=bystander;443113]
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Priorities (in order of importance) Quote:
You definitely do not want a Sony 700. The screen has glare problems, and the touch screen is really a press screen, and the letters are not as well defined as on the Sony 505 or the Kindle 2. As between the 505 and the K2, the 505 seems to me to have a little better contrast. The screen tint is shaded more toward the greenish on the 505, more toward the gray on the K2. To my eyes, this makes the 505 a little brighter, but it's only really evident when they are side by side. The K2 has a better font gradiation, because it has six possible sizes to the 505's 4 (3 standard, and a 4th, larger one in landscape mode - the K2 doesn't do landscape.) I find it easier to find a comfortable font on the K2, but the 505's largest standard font is larger than the K2's, and the landscape font is relatively huge. Further, you can adjust the font size on the 505 using Calibre, by changing the font size on the ebook itself. Of course, you have to go through this exercise for each book you want to read. I don't think this works for the K2 right now. I set up a book with a minimum font size of 18, but as far as I can tell, it did not translate to the K2 - the K2 appears to me to have suppressed the change. Quote:
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The text refresh is faster on the K2. Using Calibre, you can get free access, for download to either reader, to a lot of the magazines and newspapers that Amazon charges you to get for the K2. But I suspect that the K2 versions are better formatted for reading. I find the reading experience to be more booklike on the K2, in the sense that it seems easier to fall into the book, forgetting that it is an electronic device. If you travel without your computer, the K2's big advantage is that you don't need a computer to buy your next book. And finally, something you won't care about but makes a big difference to me - the ability to have the same book on my iPhone and the K2, and to sync the two so that I am at the last place I was in the book, no matter which reader I use. Last edited by Harmon; 04-30-2009 at 12:35 AM. |
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#6 |
Wizard
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Karma: 5239563
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Denmark
Device: Kindle 3|iPad air|iPhone 4S
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I find that using calibre on a Mac with Sony 505 works really well for me, but then I prefer to buy books where I can strip the DRM in the first place, and I'm not really concerned with buying books in formats that work directly. Plus, I'm in Europe, so access to the Sony store or Amazon.com is not relevant for me. I can't see from your list whether this is an issue.
I generally like the software on the Sony, it's easy to use. Lrf works fine as my format of choice with standard settings, and if you convert in calibre, you can set the base font size to the size you prefer. The only annoying thing is that calibre can't paginate so that will happen on the Reader the first time you open a file. For a long book that can take over 10 min. I've had to use Windows in VMWare a few times to update firmware and such, but not for getting books on the device, so it hasn't been a problem. The collections on the Sony works fine for me - I actually prefer it over folders because I can tag one book with more tags. I don't have more than up to 100 book son the Reader - if you want to carry your entire collection, real folder support might be an issue. |
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#7 |
Junior Member
![]() Posts: 5
Karma: 10
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Fort Worth, TX
Device: Sony PRS-505
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Thank you all so very much for your help. While I'm reluctant to leave the Kindle behind (especially after learning my misunderstanding about the download fees), the Sony 505 seems the best choice for me. And I downloaded Calibre, and it seems like it will work perfectly on my Mac.
Again thank you, and I'm sure I'll be back here in a few weeks with more questions on how to use my new Sony! |
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#8 | |
Wizzard
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Karma: 2000000
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: UK
Device: iPad 2, iPhone 6s, Kindle Voyage & Kindle PaperWhite
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Quote:
So far, a one-off operation for those of us who had V1.0 Readers - new devices have the latest firmware. (Unless you're into flashing custom firmware & something goes wrong and you need to recover via the official flasher app.) True, but there are plenty of other sources & those of us from outside North America can't use the store even when we are running Windows, so it's not a show-stopper! Again, a one-off operation. Once done, you can buy & transfer Adobe DRMmed books using a Mac without needing to go to Windows. |
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#9 | ||||
King of the Bongo Drums
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Device: Excelsior! (Strange...)
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Quote:
![]() 1. need to update firmware. Quote:
As you observe, if I want to flash, say, to change the font to something I like better, or something uniform, I risk something going wrong. Which is why I haven't played around in that fashion, much as I'd like to. 2. to authorize the Sony to read Adobe Digital Editions. Quote:
3. to use the Sony Bookstore Quote:
The difference is that those of us in NA can switch to the Kindle. Plus, it seems that everyone I know who has a Windows machine has a problem with it that makes it difficult to get the Sony software installed & operating correctly. Which is one of the many reasons I own Macs. I can get the same result easier and more efficiently on a Mac. From my perspective, the Kindle is superior to the 505 in two respects, aside from this compatibility issue. The first is that the Kindle has the Whisperstuff. Reading a book today, I found that I wished to refer to Shakespeare's sonnets, and inside three minutes, I had them. Read the Kindle on the way to work today, and at lunch. Sync'd it after lunch. Going home, taking a couple of short rides involving waiting at bus stops, I read the same book on my iPhone, taking up where it had been sync'd. Very nice. The second is that the Kindle, despite its larger size, is actually more comfortable to use. I didn't expect that at all. I think it's a combination of the material its made of, plus the better buttons, plus the color contrast between the Kindle and the screen. And I also think that the 505 might actually be too small - this could be a hand size issue. I'm not an Amazon fan these days, after the things they've been doing in connection with ebooks. But Sony doesn't want me. So I have to choose between two less than desirable alternatives. I find that I'm reading more on the Kindle than I did on the 505. That's the bottom line, y'know... ![]() Last edited by Harmon; 04-30-2009 at 11:43 PM. |
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#10 |
Member
![]() Posts: 10
Karma: 10
Join Date: Feb 2009
Device: Sony-PRS 505
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Eye Opener!
Thank you all here. I've been looking for a long time for such an extensive review from users. This one's perfect. I had some apprehensions about the sony, but reading this i am getting sure of buying it now. The 505 seems perfect for me now. Thank you again.
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#11 | |
I'm Super Kindle-icious
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Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Long Drive, Calinadia Candafornia
Device: KDXG, KT, Oasis
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Quote:
Plus the Kindle doesn't care if you're Mac or PC and can also take advantage of Calibre. |
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#12 |
Connoisseur
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Karma: 7940
Join Date: Feb 2009
Device: currently: ipod touch
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i hope this adds a little something --
re. kindle: amazon content can be purchased via whispernet. non-amazon content can be converted to amazon format (.mobi) using mobipocket creator or calibre, and then moved to the kindle via usb cable. i do this a lot myself, and it's no more irritating than moving copies of files to a flash drive. amazon has announced that the price of whispernet file-conversions will be .15 per mb per file, rounded up to the nearest mb, starting monday. so it's sounding to many of us as if they are going to start charging for that. it won't break me in an emergency (like if i *have* to get an article onto my kindle from work -- i don't carry the cable); but i'll mainly transfer manually, since i've been doing that so much anyway. once i'm moving a bunch of documents at once (like a dozen non-drm pulp titles from manybooks.net or feedbooks.com), it actually gets easier to move them in a clump via usb than to e-mail them. (now that i think about it, i'm not sure that including more than one document attached to a single e-mail works. maybe someone else has done that successfully. "anyone..? anyone..?") the kindle has a couple of advantages that i think you *might* find useful. one is that it will store 1500 titles. it has nearly 2 gb of storage. the other is that it includes cross-title searchability. meaning that even though you won't need or want the dictionary, you might wish to find which book a particular passage came from. the entire kindle is for all practical purposes completely keyword searchable. i've only got 360+ books loaded, and am still happy to have that feature. i'm tempted to eventually *also* have a sony or some other, more open device, for native pdf compatibility, and to be able to get e-books from the library. (don't look at me like that. i have more than one bookcase, don't i?) and i have no plans to be brand-loyal to amazon. but i reeeeally like the ability to download samples of text for free. once formatting quality is more reliable, i can see that feature going away; but in my life it helps me remember what i want to buy (i save my wish list for print, and objects); and it allows me to make sure a book is decently formatted before i ever pay for it. i like that i don't have to mess around with getting credited for purchases of badly-formatted material. but on the kindle, quite a few people dislike that the 'page' color is light gray. if one refreshes the screen, the text becomes darker, and i find that the longer i read, the more consistently dark the text appears to be; but it's clear that there is some variation among devices. my 2 cents. |
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