Calibre is great for managing an ebook library, and okay for reading ebooks but the reader is clearly not its primary focus, so I’m wondering what readers folks here use across platforms.
I know of a few, but I’m always on the lookout for different options that may have features I didn’t realize I’d love to use.
Sorry if this is going off on a tangent, but I don’t understand how people can read on non-eInk devices. For me, the original Kindle (almost, I think I started with the gen 2) was a revolution. Finally I could read digitally as well as on dead trees.
I can read a few paragraphs on my phone, and maybe 2 pages on my computer, but more? No thanks.
I’d like to hear from people who read more on those devices.
I started reading books electronically on my Palm Pilot III, later a Palm V, then a SONY Clie. I loved the convenience of it, especially because I didn’t have the shelf space for all my books at home and I’m into 800+page fantasy books that are a hassle to carry around. After reading on PDAs anything is a luxury. These days I read on my smartphone when out and 11inch iPad at home. It’s important to manage display brightness though to not tire the eyes, unlike eInk which depends on ambient light.
I generally use Google play books, it syncs across devices and have translation which is good as I started reading French books. But these features are also available on other readers like Kindle.
Interestingly I once worked on an eInk reader for a book chain competing with Amazon. I didn’t get any freebie though.
Fascinating. Did you read paper books before that? You essentially had the same experience that took a Kindle for me to have it taken.
I had a similar experience. Back before epub took off, I started reading Gutenberg books on my wince phone. I think I was using an app called jbookshelf. Even then I loved the convenience of it.
Once android happened, I switched to epubs and it was so much better.
Now I’m mostly using koreader, along with kindle and Google play books. I prefer reading anything in a foreign language on Kindle, because it’s so easy to look up words.
Speaking personally, it’s just that non-eInk displays are simply what I have to work with and they don’t bother me to read on.
I’m kind of confused, given that most displays don’t use e-Ink…Do you minimize your web browsing as a result, or is it different compared to reading ebooks for you?Disregard the question, rereading your post you address it, it just hadn’t fully clicked as I’ve not talked to many people with your experience.
FWIW, I do not read very long content on my PC. The webserial worm, which is in my top 5 of best all time series, I’d not have read if there weren’t ebook versions of it that you could load on an eReader.
You say you haven’t talked to many people like me, can you just concentrate on novels reading them on a screen exhausting to your eyes? Or does reading for hours on normal screens not exhaust them for you?
I think AMOLED screens might make a huge difference. I’ve read countless novels on my phone with zero eye strain because the black pixels are actually entirely unlit and literally black. This means the brightness for the letters can be extremely low while remaining legible and comfortably readable for hours.
Interesting, AMOLED were rare or nonexistent back then, so I don’t think I ever tried that. Now I’m curious, and I shall try reading on my AMOLED phone for a bit tomorrow ;)
If you prefer eink but want the size of a phone, there are some good, cheap phone sized android eink readers now. You have to hack them a bit to get English instead of Chinese, or buy from a seller on aliexpress who already did it for you, but it’s not a problem. I use a moaan inkpalm and I couldn’t be happier. I find myself reading in the odd moments I have here and there, which is not something I managed to do with my kindle.
Thanks, but nah, I really don’t like tiny phone screens ;)
The second one. Reading for hours on normal screens doesn’t exhaust my eyes, just a little mental fatigue depending on the type of book or how long I’m reading.
came here to say this.