
A little over a month ago, on my birthday, I opened the New Yorker and found an intimate, in depth review by Nicholson Baker of e-readers currently on the market. He hated his Kindle 2. Mostly he hated the e-ink, the technological “innovation” that is supposed to make on-screen reading more friendly on the eyes. He found its palette of sickly grays as depressing to read as wet newspaper. And he swore that sentences which were funny in print, just weren’t funny anymore in e-ink.
So he tried out some other readers. He preferred the higher contrast of the Sony Reader, but had even higher praise for the Ipod Touch. Sure the pages were tiny, but the touch screen made them easier to flip. And there were a variety of great reading aps which gave access to huge free libraries, like project Gutenberg, which has digitalized over 20,000 public domain books. He also enjoyed reading it in bed. On the Ipod you can flip the contrast so that words glow white on a black background. No need for a book light. Going back to the Kindle, after reading on the Ipod, was like “going from a Mini Cooper to a white 1982 Impala with blown shocks.“
I was sold. I make my living mostly as a book critic. Publishers, editors and writers are increasingly sending me advance copies in digital form. Like most people I find it difficult to curl up with my computer. Plus it was my birthday.
I loved my new ipod touch, though I soon stopped using it for reading. The pages were small. Like an imprinted duckling, I found myself easily drifting back to the solid, secure feel of books. But it was fantastic for other things: syncing my calendar with my i-mac, tracking my expenses, and entertaining my son on long car trips with videos and games.
It was all good, until the day I heard that quavering little voice at my elbow. “Mom, what happens if you drop the ipod Touch in the toilet?” Fortunately, in our case, nothing incredibly tragic (though I highly recommend buying thick protective silicon case, and I did lose the Wi-fi.) But the bloom was kind of off my new toy.
Even more fortunately, this happened the day before Sony launched two new e-readers in Montreal. This was part of a joint project with a Quebec book and music store to digitalize books in French. The friendly Sony rep gave me a choice between which one I’d like to try out at home: the pocket reader, a smaller version of its popular PRS-505 model, or the new Sony Touch with a touch screen and nifty stylus pen that allowed you to scribble all over it and save your handwritten notes. I love scribbling on books. It’s the book critic’s version of dog pee. How could I resist the jouissance (that's french for transgressive joy) of defacing everyone from Jane Austen to Virginia Woolf?
A week later my demo model arrived. I really liked the feel of the Sony Touch Reader in my hands. It didn't come with the leather case that Sony Readers usually have, but someone had been working hard to come up with a metal that actually felt soft and warm. I was ready to start scribbling, and decided to download a copy of Sense and Sensibility (to prepare for the upcoming release of Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters.)
I started reading. I liked the larger pages of the Sony, but there was something vaguely wrong. Something about the process of reading felt like an effort. First the touch pad was more like a press pad. It didn’t have the hypersensitivity of the Ipod. But that wasn’t really the problem. The words just didn't seem to attach as easily to my brain. I adjusted the size of the font. This seemed to improve things. Maybe I needed reading glasses? Or maybe I'd just read this book too many times. Had I finally become tired of Jane Austen? Should I scribble "getting old" in the margin?
I decided to try the same book on my ipod touch. Austen’s sharp prose leapt off the screen. Suddenly she was sharp and witty and young again.
Obviously I needed to adjust the contrast. Except I couldn’t. The other Sony models have brighter contrast, but as I later discovered, new technology demands that the Sony Touch lower the contrast to something closer to the darker grays of the Kindle.
Sigh. It wasn’t horrible. It was probably something I could get used to. Eyes are amazingly adaptable. And there were a lot of great features on The Sony Touch. Its design made it a breeze to annotate, highlight, bookmark and yes, scribble on. For professional reasons I did want to keep it. If I were back in school, this is the reader I would buy. It can read PDF and Word documents, so $399 (Canadian) is steep but not outrageous.
For pleasure reading, however, it was more expensive and not much better than the ipod. A problem, especially, since the ipod, in my opinion isn’t much better than the book.
But maybe I'm just comparing these to the wrong technology. I will say without reservation that the Sony Reader is a huge improvement on the highlighter, pencil and bookmark. It is great to be able to keep, and erase all your notes.
And for night reading, the ipod is a huge improvement on the itty bitty book light.
So this race to create the ultimate e-reader is not entirely a waste. But at this point I'd say it's far from over.


Salon.com
Comments
Kathy. I think it's an acquired taste. But it is easy to acquire, given our culture of instant grat. Just last night there was the book I heard about and I realized that instead of ordering it and waiting a few days until the postman arrived, I could have it RIGHT away, with just a few clicks on e-books. Suddenly I found myself very comfortable with the Sony Touch.
J.K. Ya, it's been a while. I was out of the country for a lot of August and I got out of the habit. And with back to school, it's hard to get it going. My son really, really wants a Wii for Christmas. Like mentioning it every day. So if you decide to sell it, let me know.
And I'm one of those 'reads everything with words on it' people, so take that for what it's worth.
You'll have to pry my books from my cold, dead fingers.
I can't envision being 30 years old again with a toddler in my lap reading Dr. Seuss on an e-reader as we both get sleepy.
By the way, thanks for this review. I'm still unconvinced about the efficacy/desireability of e-readers.
I guess I am now truly an old fart.
Rated.
I'm still holding out on investing in an e-reader. If the devices become more affordable, I'll jump in. Still waiting for a good full-color one that will better showcase magazines, comics, graphic novels, blogs, etc. Black-and-white is fine for text-only books and news articles, but is woefully lagging when it comes to illustrations.
Also, any e-reader I choose would need a good wireless function for quick and easy downloads (a key selling point for me with the Kindle is its Whispernet which lets you access the Web for free but also quickly and easily download content from Amazon.com)
Other things to consider: battery life, easy recharging, durability, and of course portability. Ideal e-readers should be bigger than cellphones but smaller than trade paperbacks, in my humble opinion.
Mary, It is great for travelling, although I ended up lugging a bag full of books anyways. I can never decide what I'm going to read on the beach.
Walter, yeah there's no way my son will be reading books on this, the illustrations simply don't translate.
Which brings me to Nick, you've hit the whole problem with a pretty big hammer. No e-reader is going to address everyone's needs. For a full color multimedia experience, you're going to need to keep re-charging. Daily. I pretty much have to plug my ipod in every night before I go to bed. Vs. the Sony which really only needs to be recharged one a week. That's the big advantage of e-ink, durability and low power.
I'm not convinced the wi-fi is all that necessary (but that may be me rationalizing now that mine has literally gone down the toilet.) Maybe if you have to do all your reading in cafes. But this downloads pretty quickly onto your computer, and then it's just another minutes to plug it into your Sony. It's not like an ipod with a ten minute syncing process. These are all text files.
Sometimes too much really is too much. It's possible that at some point Apple will come up with some tablet like device for people who are using it more for reading than music and gaming. And maybe that will answer all or most of your needs. But these sporty readers are still going to be delicate little creatures. One picnic rainstorm and you may be looking at dead screen.
Lisa. You can download these reading aps on your iphone. Start with Stanza, and then Eucalyptus. E reader is cool too because it has a feature where you can just set it on automatic scroll, at your preferred speed, so you don't even have to flip the pages. Unfortunately, now that I don't have wi-fi, I have no way of getting books into my e-reader ap.
And paper books are a thing of the past for me. Sure, there are a few I've kept around, but only until Amazon gets around to Kindle-izing them.
Stanza Reader with lots of free domain books that I refer to from time to time as a personal reference library. The classics, philosophy, history, etc...
Instapaper to get the latest news into text format and read all the news dailies and magazines and blogs.
Two dictionaries - Oxford and some other brand, so I can look up words any time.
The complete Bible in many versions, complete Shakespeare works and a US history app with all the relevant historical documents, speeches, etc...
This little product has changed my life in that on queues or anytime I am waiting for something, I am spending it constructively and usefully. I suspect if someone got stuck on a desert island with my iTouch, there's no possible way to finish reading everything on it.
Also, in the subway, an iTouch is alot easier to negotiate, especially in a packed car. You can't one hand a Kindle as easily as an iTouch with a crush of people around you.
For longer periods of reading, I won't consider a Kindle or Sony or any reader until the Apple tablet comes out and it is coming, just a matter of when. Steve Jobs' snarky remark about the Kindle in the NYT David Pogue interview hints at the competition all e-readers will get from Apple. For my purposes, it the tablet is anything remotely as groundbreaking as the iTouch is, the e-reader is a forgone conclusion.
To me, the prime difference between an Apple tablet and an e-reader will be the battery life as I'm guessing, you pretty much never have to charge a Kindle compared to an iTouch, which requires constant charging.
Exciting times, indeed! I'm waiting on the best "reader" screen + stylus (yes, marginal notes!) touchy-feely-ness + netbook + mi/wi-fi anywhere (+ optional Vulcan earphone piece) combination! Any hot bets? (But only since my writing is purely gambling for fun! ;-) )
I do have an XO Laptop, which does make a reasonably good e-reader, as well as a good web browser for many websites. But it's rather heavy and bulky as an e-reader, and battery life is terrible when wifi is on.
I have little doubt that the next few years will bring a light e-reader and web browser, with wifi, great contrast, and much higher screen resolution than current computers, but battery longevity may be a tough challenge.
To counter strain on an iTouch, I set a white on black background if an app will allow it as not all do.
That is one big advantage e-readers have on any device based on LCD screens.
If anyone has ever seen Minority Report, there is a scene that shows people reading e-newspapers, basically big, NYT sized, super-thin versions of the Kindle. You see the content of the paper changing as people read the paper and it sort of glows. I wonder if I'm going to see something like that in my lifetime.
I wish I had one to try out for a bit because I think I'd need to live with it for a while to see if it's compatible with me. Not unlike guys. (Shh, Beth....dangerously straying off topic.)
If you're at all interested, I wrote a review of both original versions of the Sony Reader on gear diary, www.geardiary.com.