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The Mobile Gadgeteer

Matthew Miller & Joel Evans

Amazon Kindle; stacking it up with B&N, Borders, and Sony

By | July 28, 2010, 11:23pm PDT

Summary: Amazon just announced a couple new Kindle units starting at $139 and has again set the bar for dedicated ebook reading devices.

The big news tonight was the new Amazon Kindle announcement and Larry posted a great hands-on article that gives you a good feel for the device. After reading his article I almost want to go out and buy one, but with an old Sony Reader 505 and Barnes & Noble Nook there really is no compelling reason for me to get one for myself. Then again, according to Larry’s hands-on I see that Amazon improved the contrast (the first gen was a whole lot better than the Kindle 2), sped up the page turns, and improved the form factor. Let’s take a look at how these new Kindle device stack up with the latest low cost eReader devices on the market.

Jason posted an article stating that the Kindle will be the sole survivor in the dedicated ebook reader market and he makes some very salient points that have me believing this may eventually be true. My Nook set the bar for a few months, but now we see low cost devices from Amazon and Borders that are just as good in most all respects. The Kindle still doesn’t support local library books and if Amazon knocks others out of the race I have to wonder if libraries will start providing ebooks in Kindle format.

Let’s take a side-by-side look at the new Amazon Kindles, Barnes & Noble Nooks, Kobo eReader (Borders), and Sony Reader. Sony was the main ereader of choice for a couple of years, but may be moving back into the high end luxury area for ebooks.

Kindle WiFi/3G Nook WiFi/3G Sony Pocket Reader Kobo eReader
Display size 6 inches 6 inches 5 inches 6 inches
Weight (ounces) 8.5/8.7 11.6/12.1 7.76 7.79
Font and text size 3 styles and 8 sizes 3 styles and 6 sizes 3 sizes 2 styles and 5 sizes
Storage Integrated 3GB avail 2GB internal with microSD slot Integrated 440MB avail 1GB internal with SD slot
Bookmark/furthest read sync Yes, Whispersync Coming soon No No
Keyboard Hardware Software touch input None None
Orientation support Portrait and landscape Portrait only Portrait only Portrait only
EPUB support No Yes Yes Yes
PDF support Yes Yes Yes Yes
Price $139/$189 $149/$199 $149.99 $149.99

The Nook also supports lending ebooks, which no one else does. The Kindle supports text to speech, which no one else does. The Sony Reader has no wireless capability, limited memory, and 8 grayscale smaller display and is clearly being outclassed here now. The Kobo eReader also has no real wireless capability (limited BlackBerry Bluetooth only), no syncing, and no keyboard ability. There are some aspects of each that appeal to different people so it depends on what you are looking for in an ebook reader.

Even though I have been spending a lot of time the last few months reading ebooks on my iPad and smartphones, I still find I enjoy longer sessions of reading on one of my dedicated ebook readers. If I didn’t already have one, I would honestly be all over a new Kindle and think Amazon reset the bar for dedicated ebook readers. The major feature it lacks is EPUB support so that you cannot read public library content or bring your content from other ebook stores like you can with all of the others.

Many believe that the magic price point for these is $99 and at this rate we may just end up seeing some available for this price in time for the holidays. At $139, I think it is almost a no brainer for book readers and if you consider that we were paying $350+ just a short while ago these new prices are quite a steal.

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Matthew Miller is an avid mobile device enthusiast who works during the day as a professional naval architect in Seattle.

Disclosure

Matthew Miller

Matthew is a professional naval architect by day and a mobile gadget freak at all other times. He purchases most of his devices and then sells them on eBay or Craigslist to buy more. Many other devices are sent for review on a 30-day loaner basis and then returned to the carrier or manufacturer. If any are provided as “keeper” or “long term loaner units” this will be clearly disclosed in his reviews.

Biography

Matthew Miller

Matthew Miller is an avid mobile device enthusiast who works during the day as a professional naval architect in Seattle. He is one of three hosts on the MobileTechRoundup podcast and runs the Nokia Experts website. Matthew started using mobile devices in 1997 with a US Robotics Pilot 1000 and has owned over 90 different devices running Palm, Linux, Symbian, Newton, BlackBerry, Mac OS X (iPhone), Google Android, and Windows Mobile operating systems. His current collection includes a Nokia N85, Nokia E71, Nokia 5800, Nokia N810, Apple iPhone, HTC Advantage, T-Mobile G1, Palm Treo Pro, HTC Fuze, MSI Wind, MacBook Pro, and many more, along with tons of accessories and classic devices like the Apple Newton MessagePad 2100 and Sony CLIE UX50. Matthew co-authored Master Visually Windows Mobile 2003, was a member of the Nokia Nseries Blogger relations program, and is a member of the invite-only Microsoft Mobius mobile device evangelist group. He can be found on various discussion forums under the user name of "palmsolo".

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