The Sword and Laser discussion
The new color nook
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In 6-12 months the market will have plenty of android tablets available and if they have app store access will end up being a much more versatile device.
B&N should have launched a Nook 2 with better battery life an improved UI and more storage and held off on color.

http://money.cnn.com/2010/10/26/techn...
I see this color Nook as a color document reader (think magazines and documents with pictures) and not as a dedicated novel reader, due to the battery life. I don't think this is a bad option, considering it's half the price of the iPad, and will have most of the functionality I want in a device like that. The thing that will make or break this device for me is its ability to handle pdf documents well. It's cheaper than the Velocity Micro Cruz, so I'm all for it.


The iPad might be a tad more, but a couple of extra paycheck savings and it's fancy pants time.
Angry Birds, anyone? :)



B&N needed a channel other than the PC to deliver their new NOOKkids content, which includes interactive story books. I imagine that drove the decision for a bright, colorful display.
I am very excited to see the NOOKdeveloper program. The SDK will be for the NOOKcolor only to begin, but will later allow deployment to the original NOOK. I'm eager to port YAGRAC to the platform, and I have some ideas for some very interesting Goodreads integrations that might be possible on this device.

What would have made this device extremely attractive to me is if they could have offered it at a subsidized price, bundled with a subscription service to a core group of magazines/newspapers subscriptions.
Given all of the other more robust options available and the 8 hour battery life - I'm afraid I'll be passing on this.
Regards, Jim


Also, they have finally promised a "Whisper Sync" capability that just begs for a 3g option. Unless they come up with some sort of Ad-Hoc syncing for the various platforms I wil wait for a 3g tablet of some sort. I can live with the reduced battery life and the screen sounds interesting. The only question is if the backlight can be turned off/ how low it can go. Reading in bed is a problem for anyh non-backlit device, but my iPod Touch and DroidX are way too bright, even with the brightness turned all the way down. Maybe someone will come up with an edgelit tablet to fix this.
Of course, Netflix would make this a killer device. I already watch netflixon a small iPod Touch screen, this would be a really cheap way to get Netflix when they launch on Android.

If the choice is between pay $250 for the app crippled Nook color or a similar amount for a table that has App store access I think the choice is obvious.
It seems there are even some android tablets on the way that will noticeably cheaper than the Nook Color according to this article http://phandroid.com/2010/10/28/99-wa....

As an android fanboy, I'm also concerned about the dedicated SDK. That seems like a step backwards. Actual fragmentation?
I'm moving forward with my Kindle order.

And the majority of you are disappointed ?
As Rodney Dangerfield said
"I told a cab driver to take me where the action was, and he took me to MY house!"
(No laughter)
(Nervously adjusts tie) "Oh, tough crowd, tough crowd..."

In order to set itself apart, the NOOKcolor has to do something truly unique with these features to justify the price.

In comparison to the Nook and Kindle, as an e-reader, my feeling is that giving up e-ink (and thus getting a worse reading experience) and battery life, would require a lot more compensation than a browser and a few apps, especially if I am paying more.
In comparison to a full-service tablet like the Galaxy Tab, the price difference for the wifi version is more than made up for by the huge amount of additional features (ie, 100,000 apps).
So, either way, this product sort of falls in between giving up too many of the benefits of either without enough to compensate for it.

As an android fanboy, I'm also concerned abo..."
Get an iPad, you know it makes sense. :)
Thoughts?