Sadly the Android version actually has fewer options than its iPhone relation — you have less
text size choices and can't highlight text or add notes.
Not exact matches
The Amazon Kindle reader for iPhones has competitive features like adjusting font
sizes though you're limited to just five font types with a
choice of black
text on white, reversed and in sepia look which many consider kindest to your eyes.
Nooks: There are more font
choice,
text size and line / margin spacing options.They also have a built in dictionary.The notes you make can be used by the desktop app or the web reader but you will not be allowed to export them or see them on all other apps.They offer a storage space of 2 Gb along with Micro SD support.
Love the screen: Colour and Clarity is awesome; very responsive for videos, very clear and crisp
text, lots of font /
size / margin / brightness
choices for e-reading.
The
text options are many, with six
choices each for
text size, fonts, spacing, and background color (choose among normal, a dark gray, light gray, butter, mocha, and sepia).
Cover design is another matter, trickier to tweak for specific book
size (your
choice), and critical to have a professional look in graphic terms, along with a compelling
text «hook» to attract reader interest.
Opening the ebook then gave me a few easy - to - understand
choices, from bookmarking,
text searching and font
size changes.
The Zoom button allows you to adjust the
size of the type, with a
choice of six
sizes; you can also zoom in and out using a sliding control or choose to view your document with different -
size margins or with two or three columns of
text.
The Ematic feels much flimsier than any of the above, and is much less flexible in fitting the non-default fonts into the screen space — lots of sluggish, jerky panning and scrolling for PDF's, and ebooks»
text seemed to skip the «off - screen» parts quite a bit when going back and forth in the larger
text modes (only 4 or 5
size choices, and no font
choices).
Couple the display with the Nook Tablet's superior font
sizes and style
choices plus better
text rendering, and you have a nicer environment for reading.
Tapping at the bottom of the screen opens up a simple options menu, and Kobo still goes beyond Kindle when it comes to getting your own look and feel, with a
choice of eleven fonts,
size, margin and spacing sliders, justification options and even an Advanced view that lets you see the
text before and after.
Users can also fine - tune the
text on the screen thanks to eight adjustable font
sizes and a
choice of six font styles.
Features include adding bookmarks, jumping to a page number or chapter with the TOC, adjusting
text size (5
choices), auto - adjust to portrait and landscape modes, and you can set the pages to auto - turn at 15, 30, or 60 seconds.
Features for the NextBook app include adding bookmarks, jumping to a page number or chapter with the TOC, adjusting
text size (5
choices), auto - adjust to portrait and landscape modes, and you can set the pages to auto - turn at 15, 30, or 60 seconds.
You get lots of font
choices (as well as
text size, line spacing, and margin adjustments), a built - in dictionary (for 13 different languages), plus a translation dictionary with five different language options (it didn't work as well as I'd hoped).
The readability of a site can be affected by
text size,
choice of font, and color combinations; that's three chances to get something wrong and it'll only take one to drive visitors away.
# 1 > To get high contrast I set my
choice of font style and
size in my software to be applied to incoming
text.
Along with the overall style
choices you can set the number of appointments that appears on the tile, show past events for the day, turn on the back side of the tile for more events, set the
text size and color, choose a background image, and turn on / off the display for update times and week numbers.
You can also type in
text with a
choice of three fonts, in a variety of
sizes and justifications.