All,
I'm looking to invest in an e-book reader and would appreciate hearing about your experiences with them, good and bad. Andy
I've been reading e-books since at least 10/6/2002 on my Palm PDAs. At best guess, I've read roughly 500 ebooks on my various Palm PDAs.
I have not purchased a dedicated e-book reader (despite reading about them and trying them in stores), because my e-book needs are met by a multipurpose device. My coworker mentioned that his iPhone works well for his e-book needs.
I think e-books are good in their place, but I'd suggest you consider whether a smartphone (iPhone, Android) would serve you better than a dedicated ebook reader.
What I like about e-books:
- I save money. My favorite science fiction publisher has extremely low prices on e-books.
Baen Books Each month they offer a 6-book package for $15, usually including that month's new releases (otherwise only available in hardback or trade paper). The books in this month's package total $88.96 in list price in paper. Sure, I can't resell them, but realistically, I've saved far more money than I'd get from resale.
- I save space. I own over 6,000 books in physical form (and buy more every month). Buying ebooks (and using the library) helps keep that down.
- I always have something to read in an odd moment. If I'm waiting for my wife at the store, or at an airport terminal, I"m set.
- I can read in bed comfortably without disturbing my wife (since my Palm is self-lit).
- It is no extra weight for me, since I'd be carrying the Palm on my belt in any case. I expect the same for my coworker with his iPhone. For my sister, yes, it is extra weight.
- The e-book reader remembers my place, I don't need to use a physical bookmark.
Dislikes:
- Some publishers seem to think they can get me to pay as much, or almost as much, for an e-book as for a physical book. So far, they have been wrong.
- My Palm Tungsten E has a limited battery life, and the display washes out in sunlight. Ebook readers wouldn't have either problem.
I have no bias towards any brand or seller. I would like one that will read a variety of file formats including .pdf and has both wifi and (pardon if I don't use the right term here) celluar communications.
Andy
Based on my frantic research after my sister bought a Sony Reader and was wondering if she should return it for a Kindle instead, both the recent Kindles and the Sony Reader support at least simple .PDF in their latest version. For non-DRM books, translation between the various formats (and reading e-Books) can be done using the freeware program
Calibre. So, if what you want is only available as one of the 1,000,000+ ePub books at Google Books, translating it to Kindle format is just one more step.
Many of the free ebooks (like the 27,193 at
ManyBooks.net can be downloaded in whatever format your e-book reader likes (ManyBooks.net offers 24 choices).
Some commercial sellers do likewise: Baen Books offers six formats.
Interested in knowing how you handle the "anxiety" of carrying around an expensive bit of kit to read Lee Child novels. <snip>
Andy
Since I read my books on expensive kit I carry around regardless of e-reading, that hasn't been a direct issue. For preserving said kit, I have a nice secure leather belt case. So far, I've had a PDA as EDC for 12 years with no physical accidents to the hardware.
Not so fortunate with cell phones, though, since the balt cases I was able to find had a nasty habit of popping off my belt.