SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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What if any ebook formats do you read?
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Ben
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Jan 20, 2015 09:32PM

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ePubs only. Amazon flat refusal to support this format means I have to look for non-Kindle reader every time I need one.



I have owned and used Barnes and Noble Nooks since they were first introduced. Color, Tablet, and HD+ have all figured in my reading for a number of years. With the advent of Samsung products, I moved away from Nook specific boxes, opting instead for a standard Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 10.1. I do use apps for Nook, Kindle, Kobo, and several generic and specific format readers, including Adobe DRM library loans to assist my daughter with her graduate school work and US Department of Commerce specific platforms used by the Merchant Marine. I have also read PDF and Google Play books using Adobe PDF and Google Chrome on my Galaxy Tab 4. I still read print books as well, including a nicely done work by aviation historian Kenneth P. Werrell, Death from the Heavens: A History of Strategic Bombing. Very extensively researched and pictorially rich. Keep calm, and keep reading on!








I don’t like reading on my cell phone, and I only do it if I’m stuck somewhere without my Kindle and want to pass some time. But I could understand how some people might like it. Some people have trouble keeping their place as they read, perhaps using their finger or a bookmark to keep track of their position. With less text visible at once, maybe it's easier for some of those people to just read unaided without losing their place since there’s not a whole lot of room in which to get lost. I doubt she’s claiming she can read faster than other people who don’t use a phone. She’s probably just saying that she can read faster herself on the phone than she can otherwise.
As far as the topic of this thread goes… I've had a Kindle since the beginning of Kindles, so most of my e-books are in a mobi format – either because I obtained them that way or because I converted them. Before that, I used whatever the palm pilot format was – pdb I think? I agree with the people who say the format isn’t really all that relevant since it’s easy enough to convert if necessary. It saves a little time if you have a book in the right format to begin with, but I see no reason to limit oneself to a specific format.

Funny enough, my novels in paperback outsell my ebook versions.




After using ereaders for so many years, I now find paper books heavy, clumsy and awkward. I've got used to holding a book in one hand and turning the page with a tiny movement of my thumb.
I think, even if I actually enjoyed fumbling with great heavy tomes for some reason, the sheer wonderfulness of always having my books with me AND being able to have any new book I want in my hand in less than a minute from feeling the urge to read it, wherever I am at whatever time of day, would greatly outweigh that feeling.

Don't Nook, Kobo, and various 3rd party devices have e-ink, quality displays, and good ergonomics? How many have you tried? Are these the only criteria?
I ask because I've settled on a non-Kindle ereader and am wondering if there is a feature that clearly sets the Kindle apart.

Ben, all the readers you mentioned are excellent. If you have one, I wouldn't swap based on quality or ergonomics alone (unless you're very fussy about those things, as I am). But if you do want a feature that sets the Kindle apart, it is the Amazon store. I do use other stores from time to time and not one of them has the speed, ease of use, extra features, or range of products that Amazon has. (In fact, I positively dislike Kobo and avoid it where possible.)

I don't really like reading on a computer, I want to "hold" it like a book, so those are only two real formats that I know of. I can use apps on ipad too, but still prefer the kindle.



So yeah, go me. *shrugs*

Kindle and Nook aren't format ebook but readers.
My next reader will probably also be a epub reader, so not a kindle since most of the files I have are already epub. It's nice to have the choice of many readers (except kindle). It's also nice to not be so Amazon dependent.

My thoughts - you should only have to buy a book once - who car..."
I have a regular kindle (older one) and just got a Kindle Paperwhite a week or so ago. I LOVE the Paperwhite. I liked the standard kindle, but the only issue was (like a regular book) you had to have good lighting. The Kindle Paperwhite still has that "book look", but also provides light so you can read in a darker area. I love it!



fully agree

As a person in the computer world I am always conscious of how quickly formats change, don't want to decide to re read a book in 10 years and cant because the format has changed.

I own a Kindle Fire 5 (as of last month), a Kobo, a Nook, a Binatone, and a tentatively-functioning Kindle Keyboard, as well as my laptop and my Android smartphone - all with Aldiko, Audible, Calibre, Google Books, Kindle & Kobo apps, LibriVox, Overdrive and Wordoholic Reader between them.
I have also had a couple of Sony Readers in the past... I loved them, but both died painfully quickly (I suspect planned obsolescence). And yes, before anybody says it, every single e-reader except the Fire was bought used. (I don't count my phone (contract) or laptop.) I have Neil Gaiman's autograph on my Kobo... *pets it fondly*
So as you see, format's really not much of an issue for me. I tend to prefer using .epub though, with .mobi solely for the Kindles.


Since Calibre allows you to edit almost any document format, my preferred format is now epub.
I read ebooks on my Nook, my Android phone and on my laptop. I initially opted for the Nook because it can read more formats than any other reader, and my ebook collection has files in many different formats.

so paper books as a back up will continue for me


best invention out.
