Love the form factor, weight, and size... and
the capacitive page buttons are a damn close alternative to physical ones.
Not exact matches
The main selling points for the Kindle Voyage are the high resolution 300 ppi screen, the frontlight, the
page turn sensor
buttons, the lightweight, portable design, the
capacitive touchscreen, and flush display.
This model has a
capacitive touchscreen display and also employs manual
page turn
buttons, a feature most other companies have abandoned.
You have
capacitive touch screen
page turning
buttons to go forward and backwards.
Even the Kindle Voyage «
page turn
buttons» don't work with gloves, because they're based on
capacitive technology too,.
The PaperWhite doesn't have any
buttons and it uses a
capacitive touchscreen that doesn't recognize a gloved hand to turn
pages.
That means since
capacitive touch won't work underwater it would need physical
buttons (or the
page turn flex approach).
In addition to the two - point
capacitive touchscreen, the Book T68 has physical
page and navigation
buttons, which suits ereaders well.
All that additional cost is going to hardware upgrades, which includes a 300 ppi screen, a frontlight, a flush
capacitive touchscreen, and
page sensor
buttons.
The T68 has Android with Google Play, physical
page turning
buttons, Bluetooth, audio support, and two point
capacitive touch — all things the Kobo Aura HD lacks.
Keep in mind that this has a
capacitive touch screen, literally more than double the on screen pixels to refresh every
page turn, the new pressure - sensitive
buttons, and the haptic feedback.
Other features include the addition of Bluetooth, it has Wi - Fi, a frontlight, and a
capacitive touchscreen, with
page buttons on each side of the screen.
The
capacitive page turn
buttons, flush bezel, and that super high res screen are where it's at right now.
Use the
capacitive touchs screen or dedicated
page turning
buttons for browsing through your books.
It has a 2 - point
capacitive touchscreen, adjustable frontlight, Wi - Fi,
page buttons on both sides of the screen, a dual - core 1Ghz processor, 8 GB of built - in storage space, 512 MB of DDR3 RAM, and there's a microSD card slot for cards up to 32 GB.
We recommend the Kindle Voyage ($ 200), which has a lit screen for reading in all types of lighting conditions, along with
capacitive page - turning
buttons for super easy wielding.