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My wife gave me a Kindle 2 last Christmas. I'd reviewed and mostly 's best-lling e-reader, but I wasn't sure it would ever replace “real” books for me.
行车记录仪哪个好Like a lot of readers, I love the physical nature of books — the feel, the design, even the smell. But the more I ud the Kindle, the more I liked it.
And then ... along came the iPad.
I don't have Kindle owner's remor, but I understand the angst of tho who do. With its grayscale display and 北飞的候鸟does-one-thing-well approach,
Amazon's e-reader is neither as stylishly alluring nor as powerful as Apple's product.
But how do the two compare strictly as e-book readers? When you simply want to sit down and enjoy a good book, which has the best experience?
Here's a look at how the iPad and the Kindle compare as e-readers in four key areas: readability, ergonomics, convenience and cost.
• • READABILITY. Can you look at it for a long time without eyestrain路由器无法上网? Are the characters on the screen crisp and easy to e?
The Kindle us a reflective screen with no backlighting — just like a paper book — while the iPad has an LED backlit display. Each has advantages and disadvantages. The Kindle requires decent external lighting; you can't read well in a dark room. The iPad has a bright screen, but it doesn't do well in direct sunlight.
Usually I have no problems reading a backlit screen, but it bothers a lot of people. However, reading for long periods on my iPad is difficult. I don't have a problem spending hours with the Kindle. As first noted by John Gruber on his Daring Fireball blog, the reason may have to do with how clo together the pixels are, a factor known as pixel density. The iPad's pixel density is less than that of the Kindle — or the iPhone — so the characters are less distinct. The advantage here goes to the Kindle.
• • ERGONOMICS. Is it easy to handle and u? Are buttons and other controls comfortable to access? Does using it create physical strain?
元宵节有哪些风俗At 1.5 pounds, the iPad is relatively heavy, compared with the Kindle and iPhone. While it's light compared to, say, the hardback version of Stephen King's The Dome, you still feel its heft after holding it for a while. The Kindle, meanwhile, is about the weight of a thick comic book. You can hold it comfortably for hours. The Kindle's also smaller, so it's also easier to juggle while reading in bed (though that's not the ca with its larger incarnation, the Kindle DX).
恋爱潜规则The iPad has an advantage when it comes to page turning — it's simpler and natural. You can either just tap the edges of the virtual pages on the screen in the iBooks app, or move your finger along the bottom as though you are turning a page. It works this way in the Kindle app, as well. The Kindle 2 requires that you press long buttons on either side of its ca to turn pages.
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