I am referring specifically to the iPad 4, not any of the earlier versions. I waited for the higher resolution screen before buying any of these because I did not think I would be satisfied with a lower resolution screen. Even then, I first tried the Kindle Fire, but found the screen size too small for me.

I sympathize with your dislike of the closed platform, but, for me, the extensive app availability for the Apple was decisive.

As to Owen's latest: I can only hope (though I doubt it). I buy all of my books through Amazon (or through Amazon marketplace).

As to Bruce's comments:

on weight: I agree. that is why I am looking for the next iteration of the iPad.

on flipping: I think my iPad is faster than the e-ink readers. That might even get better in the next generation with a faster processor. (which might also be true for future generation Kindles..) I have tried using bookmarks, et cetera in iAnnotate. This works when I want to go to the index. For visual recognition, only fast flipping would work. Nothing is completely satisfactory, but it is not so bad..

Joe




On 2/9/13 1:48 PM, Gary Schiltz wrote:
Thanks for your input, everyone. It sounds like I would be happy with an iPad. I haven't been able to try an iPad 3 or 4 yet - believe it or not, the newest iPad for sale here in Ecuador is the iPad 2, and it runs about $700 for a 16GB wireless model. So, stores aren't too big on letting you play with them. I have tried a few books on a friend's iPad 2, and was a bit bothered by the lower resolution (as compared with the 3 and 4) at typical book reading distance.

Echoing Roger's experience of reading on a phone, I do have an iPhone 4S, and find it surprisingly usable for re-formattable text. I've read around 20-30 novels on it, and with +3 reading glasses, I can read tech book sized PDFs in landscape mode (not that comfortably, though).

Now, I guess my big decision is iOS vs Android. I used to be nearly an Apple fanboy, but am starting to view them as the new 800 pound gorilla. It just seems wrong to support a platform that only supports software sold and approved by a single vendor, that can only be developed in one language. Has anyone had a chance to see the Nexus 7 or 10?

;; Gary

On Feb 9, 2013, at 1:30 PM, Owen Densmore <o...@backspaces.net <mailto:o...@backspaces.net>> wrote:

Nearly all my tech books are on my iPad. Its a bit heavy, especially compared to the kindle. But the battery life is fine and I find it great to use. But all the others are good too, I'm sure.

But one huge piece of advice: make sure whatever you do end up with has a reader for *all* the formats. OReilly for example gives you pdf, epub, mobi, and sometimes the apk format. And it does make quite a difference.

I hope the ebook format madness stops in the near future, Tom may be able to update us, but you should not get a device that will not read all the big three: pdf, mobi, epub (mobi is the kindle version and kindle reads it.) IIRC, the iPad book reader handles more than one format. And I think all devices have a pdf reader, either built in or as an app.

I would try whatever you are considering, especially the various file formats. I'd beware of the kindle books themselves, at least for tech books, they do not come in the multiple formats and have many silly errors that are slowly being fixed. The kindle app is available everywhere, even as a webapp.

   -- Owen

On Fri, Feb 8, 2013 at 4:59 PM, Gary Schiltz <g...@naturesvisualarts.com <mailto:g...@naturesvisualarts.com>> wrote:

    To me, it's debatable whether switching from hardcopy books to
    ebooks is a net environmental plus. However, living down here in
    Ecuador makes it a real pain in the butt to get hardcopies of
    technical books, especially in English. So far, I've been reading
    PDFs on my laptop, but the screen is too far from my face to
    really take advantage of its resolution. So, I'm considering
    either an iPad or some sort of Android tablet. A smaller form
    factor like Kindle Fire or Nexus 7 would be fine for material
    that can be reformatted on the fly, but I really prefer
    pre-formatted PDF ebooks. I'm afraid that a seven inch screen
    would be too small for most PDF ebooks. Does anyone here use a
    tablet to read PDFs? I'd appreciate hearing of your experiences.
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  -- Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis, 1913.

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