Sentences with phrase «smaller screen ereaders»

This means that PDF books created to be printed on standard legal (or A4) size paper do not typically display well on smaller screen ereaders such as the Amazon Kindle or the Barnes & Noble NOOK.

Not exact matches

I mean, the iPod / iPhone ereader Stanza was downloaded a million times last year and I can't for one second think about reading a book on a screen that small!
When you make it with a color screen ok 8 ″ is small to read science books, comics, newspapers... And the ereader 13,3 ″ should have color screen.
if you could please help me on this - i want to buy small ereader till sony 13.3 arrives which is the best ereader to read pdf if i reflow it on pc -(kobo aura hd - as has a large screen, kobo aura 6 ′ or sony prs t3) will appreciate your response thanks pls reply
Controllers are easier to design than the electrophoretic screen itself... Here it's the eInk monopoly that's been the most damaging to the ereader market... witness the small screens with low dpi after 15 yrs of R&D... Compare with phones
Won't a small ereader, like a six - inch, likely have a smaller battery than its larger cousins, and won't the smaller screen - size and use of larger fonts increase the number of necessary page - turns and therefore drain the battery quicker than on a larger device?
At least an 8 ″ or even a 7 ″ screen would have been a differentiation point and scoop up all the ereader customers who find the 6 ″ Kindle screen too small.
The newer model has adjustable frontlight color and it has twice as much internal storage space and the overall size is a bit smaller, but the software and screen are the same so if you want a slightly larger 6.8 - inch ereader the 1st gen H2O is still worth considering.
The eBook Reader Comparison Table A table comparing the top ereaders currently available with color and E Ink screens, small and large.
For that purpose I bought the very first eReaders and it's usable, yet there are major drawbacks — the small screens (until now 8inch is the max, looking forward to the 13.3!)
For example, I'd rather have the new sony reader than the DX for what I'd need from an ereader (other than reading books) despite the smaller screen.
I haven't read a comic book on an ereader, except once and I gave up on it... The Kindle Readers are very difficult to work with... 6 ″ is way too small a screen, plus the delay to zoom in to read the dang thing just takes too much effort.
Bormasina belongs to a very small segment of the market that only wants an eReader to read at night, and doesn't care about screen contrast or the glare issues during daytime reading, an activity he / she doesn't seem to participate in.
PDF is awkward on the small screens of mobile devices and they can not be read by most ereaders, although the iPad displays them brilliantly.
Those looking for a large screen eReader would be better off with the identically priced Sony Reader Daily Edition, and those who want a better all - around experience should get the smaller and cheaper $ 259 Nook or Kindle.
It is growing all the time as new devices come onto the market but really you will be restricted to tablet PCs like the iPad, Google Nexus, Kindle Fire etc. (whilst they will work on smaller devices like the Kindle Voyage or Paperwhite they will not look as good as the smaller the eReader the more the layout will be shrunk to fit the screen, unlike with the reflowable text option which can be read comfortably on any size device).
This is useful when in full screen mode as PDFs with diagrams and pictures look small on six inch eReaders and being able to zoom in on them is very useful.
Ereaders with smaller 5 - inch screens used to be more common, but there haven't been any new models released since the Sony PRS - 350 over two years ago.
The Sony PRS - 300 is one a few new ebook readers to feature a smaller 5 - inch screen, and is the lowest priced E Ink ereader on the market.
The Kindle is the smallest eReader ever made by Amazon, despite having the standard 6 inch screen.
German developer, txtr, has revealed the Beagle, which it claims is the smallest eReader in the world, with a 5 - inch screen and a weight of 128 grams (about 4.5 ounces).
At the same time, in many disciplines the mediocre PDF display capabilities, small screen, and lack of color do have the ability to hinder the eReader's usefulness.
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