1duck":hukgarfa said:
Neil":hukgarfa said:
If you use Calibre, then, what difference does it make whether you the ebook reader you use natively supports a specific format like epub?
Because my clients send most of the works they want translated or edited in epub, sure i could convert them with calibre and then convert them back but it all becomes a fuss...plus i have had strange side effects on the documents through converting then converting back it doesn't seem to be very foreign language friendly it turns accents into random symbols etc
If i had to buy again i wouldn't bother with a kindle i'd go straight for the kobo, because like you've already said the newer kindles aren't even as good as the original.
Display is just as good as the kindle, vendor support? unless i break it i wouldn't need that, they have a partnership with whsmiths so its not like its some dodgy chinese ereader. The only thing it hasn't got is 3g, which to me is irrelevant. If you can't find a wifi connection you're probably somewhere in the middle of nowhere in which case i think a new book for your ereader is the least of your worries.
I can understand your reasoning, now - and as you say, Calibre may not be completely flawless when converting documents with accents or other symbols - I've encountered that myself.
It's often possible to tweak or work around that, but as you have a tangible reason for native epub, then why would you - it can be a tedious, iterative process.
I guess my point, though, was in counter to most people saying Kindles don't support epub, and their main reasoning against that being a shed-load of epubs they've torrent'd - but as you may well use something like Calibre to sanitise metadata, conversion to a-n-other format is hardly onerous. Point being (which I accept, now, you have a valid counter) that most people mention something like this, probably because they've read something arbitrarily in a review, and the reality is for most that it has precious little, or zero bearing.
As to vendor support, I was more thinking of library available, things like whispersync, and their free email conversion support (helps with the less technical users). Also, in fairness, Amazon's customer support for the Kindle does tend to be very good.
As to my comments on 3G support, well it's one thing I have encountered that's something of a minor regret, really. My Kindle is a Kindle 3 (now called keyboard) WiFi model. Which at the time seemed just peachy. But I genuinely think 3G capabilities for an ebook reader (especially feature rich like Kindles are) to be quite a boon - not for buying books / content, per se (although I recognise that to some users it will be), but for the other aspects - whispersync - so syncing reading positions with other devices. Plus the 3G access on the Kindle is relatively inexpensive for the "product" you get. And I genuinely am in several locations with no WiFi access, but perfectly fine 3G coverage - and similar to many Android devices, Kindles only seem to want to use APs that are infrastructure, as opposed to ad-hoc.
I actually prefer the lack of touchscreen, it's one less screen to worry about keeping clean of finger marks, or the palaver of screen protectors - which on the Kindle's e-ink screen, at least, made it less viewable with more reflection and glare.
Also, I think it has to be said, many buy gadgets in a speculative nature - not truly sure what they want them for, nor how they'll use them. Often ebook readers, tablets and other gadgets are bought on that basis, then when people have used them for a bit, they either miss or regret things / options not bought, or their product choice in the first place. And in fairness, some of that only evolves through understanding and change of usage, rather than likely initial intent or desire / requirement.
As a generalism, I still think the following criteria is probably suitable for most (and is, in fairness, vendor agnostic):-
Neil":hukgarfa said:
IMNSHO best criteria for buying an ebook reader are display, vendor support (ie library, and things you actually want to use it for), and features.