He Who Hesitates is Sometimes Better Off
I have three Android devices. I’m happy with two of them.
After getting a Samsung Captivate last fall, following up with a Motorola Xoom two months ago, I bought a Barnes & Noble Nook last week.
The Xoom was supposed to be my e-reader. While the iPad had electronic versions of all the publications I’m interested in as well as app versions of both the Nook and Amazon Kindle, I was bothered by the fuzzy-looking text. The Xoom offered sharper text and both of the e-reading apps. I hoped my publications were coming, heartened by the fact that a version of Wall Street Journal was already available for the 7-inch Galaxy Tab and Conde Nast’s announcement last winter that the New Yorker and Wired were on their way to Android tablets by this spring. As of today, none of those publications is available on 10-inch Androids.
So after years of dismissing e-ink readers as tablet wannabes, I finally bought one. I went with the Nook over the Kindle because of its smaller screen, longer batter life and more advanced screen. I’ve been pleasantly surprised. E-ink really is much easier on the eyes. And having a single-purpose device allows me to truly read the text without the distraction of knowing that e-mail, Web sites and games are a click away.
If I were to do it all over again, I would have bought the Nook now and waited for the next generation of tablets, both Android and iOS. Lesson learned.
I bought myself a Nook about a month or so ago. I'm enjoying it. I haven't jumped on the tablet bandwagon yet, mostly because I don't want the distraction when reading -- the plain vanilla Nook is much like a book: just me and the text.
ReplyDeleteI bought my wife the latest Kindle last X'mas. There are some known bugs that have been the cause of frustration for her. Maybe we'll try the Nook next.
ReplyDeleteThe Nook not only has a longer batter life but also a longer battery life.
ReplyDelete