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07-30-2024, 09:15 AM | #1 |
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Any suggestions for a 10 inch reader with limited functionality? (mainly just reading
Someone on the search for a 10 inch e-reader£ However, I have a few requirements:
Only black and white Compatible with the common e-book formats Ability to download e-books from third-party websites as I never purchased the e-book from Amazon or anywhere else Call my ID I can download from my iPhone as I don't have a computer Able to play audiobooks, but I'm not essential Not to have a annotation/scribe function as I'm honourable to hold a pin, unfortunately unfortunately Good PPI B&W quality Not able to show adverts Long pantry life This will be my first e-reader and it seems all the big screens at 10 inches half describe function which I don't want I know this requirement makes it hard to find a suitable reader. Anyone of any there. Thank you, ,Wendy |
07-30-2024, 12:04 PM | #2 |
the rook, bossing Never.
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I've had two 10″ plus ereaders and a 9.7″ ereader. None are in use now, because they are too limited for anything that is no use on 6″ to 8″ dedicated ereaders and heavy to read a novel on.
If you don't have a computer (or an Android Tablet), then you are limited to the Scribe for ebooks from Amazon or the Kobo for ebooks from Kobo. Likely the pocketbook shop is more limited. If you go for an Android tablet with a matt screen, which are almost like a dedicated black & white ereader, the 10.9″ TCL Nxtpaper 11 is cheaper than the most of the 10 inch plus dedicated ereaders with 32G (Amazon Kindle Scribe, Kobo Elipsa, Pocketbook, Onyx Boox or overpriced niche Bigme, or very limited reMarkable). It will let you buy from Amazon. Kobo, Pocketbook, Smashwords, ebooks.com and Google Playbooks. Its shelf life (pantry life?) is weeks and run time similar to some dedicated ereaders. It has 256 G, SD card slot, audio jack, BT for ear buds, WiFi etc. Only Barnes & Noble if you are in the USA and easily use 100,000 public domain (free) ebooks, age etc depending on where you live. The annotation/notebook feature can be ignored on any with it (which is practically every 10″ plus ereader). The web browsers on dedicated ereaders are awkward to use and can be incompatible with sites of PD (free) or bought ebooks. None really have adverts except Amazon, and you pay once extra to not have them, and might not apply to Scribe. Any dedicated ereaders that play audiobooks do it worse than your iPhone and only from associated store, not any audio books. |
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07-30-2024, 12:20 PM | #3 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I would guess with an iPhone and Google drive, the op wouldn't need to get ebooks from Kobo (depending on DRM).
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07-30-2024, 12:45 PM | #4 |
the rook, bossing Never.
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The iPhone doesn't play well outside Apple ecosystem to download ebooks to something, and not all ereaders support Google drive, which is an added complication.
Also even on Android phone (Android 4.x to Android 13), you need an ereader with Mass Storage (so not Kindle Scribe, Onyx Boox, Pocketbook android models or reMarkable) and an OTG adapater and a File Manager. I've managed it to a PaperWhite 3 (unlike Scribe it's Mass Storage) and a Kobo Aura H2O on Android 4.1 Sony phone with a Micro-USB OTG USB-A adapter and a USB cable. With Android 13 I had to add a USB hub with also a USB memory stick to get the Kobo Sage recognised. Then I was able to copy on a downloaded epub and also copy off the conf file and open it in Jota (free Android text editor). I can't see that Google Drive helps and only having an iPhone is limiting unless you only read on iPhone apps. Hence either a 7″ approx Kindle or Kobo, or if 10″ plus really needed the TCL Nxtpaper 11 tablet, (under €240 in shipping in EU) and is almost as good as mono eink and does everything except deDRM and run Calibre! Far better than a x5 price iPad (we have compared side by side). |
07-30-2024, 01:32 PM | #5 | |
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Quote:
I assume once they are in Google Drive, Kobos (at least the ones with Google Drive support) can download the epubs. |
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07-30-2024, 03:13 PM | #6 | |
the rook, bossing Never.
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Quote:
I know some people use it, but passing stuff to a dedicated ereader with Google Drive is clunky and stupid. It only even works with some ereaders. Also for bought books other than Smashwords, there is DRM. Hence if you don't have a computer the totally best solution is a matt screen Android tablet. An iPhone plus Google drive would just be a clunky stupid way for PD. You can actually access most PD direct on many ereaders, and certainly Kobo. it is the copyright books on an ereader WITHOUT PC where you are locked to the ereader's vendor's book shop. If you have a computer (Mac, Linux, Windows and some newer Chromebooks), then you can buy any ebooks nearly anywhere and read them on anything. Google drive solves nothing. Also if they have no computer they likely have no WiFi for a Kobo to Google Drive unless the iPhone can be a WiFi hotspot. My iPhone had no such feature, but my older cheaper Android phone does still support Mobile to WiFi or USB networking. Last edited by Quoth; 07-30-2024 at 03:19 PM. |
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07-30-2024, 03:44 PM | #7 |
Bibliophagist
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Really? Your Android phone is over 13 years old? I remember being able to use a hot spot on my iPhone 4 back in early 2011 and it has been there ever since.
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07-30-2024, 04:40 PM | #8 |
Wizard
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All 10" devices have writing functionality. The Boox Note Air 3 would probably meet most of your requirements.
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07-30-2024, 04:46 PM | #9 |
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07-30-2024, 05:05 PM | #10 | |
the rook, bossing Never.
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Quote:
Certainly most ereaders will need the WiFi hotspot feature, though some Kindles and Tablets have mobile/cell. Due to OP not having a computer they are are unlikely to have WiFi, unless bundled with their cable TV. Edit: Still have the Sony Ericsson to test epubs as it has 4.3″ screen. Battery easily replaced, as new one fitted a couple of years ago cheaply, takes 32 G SD card so makes an MP3/audiobook player too. Older than iPhone 4S and Playstore only stopped working end of last year. My newest phone also does tethering of every kind, has 3.5mm jack, SD Card slot up to 1 T and 128 G built in. €176 Android 13, 6.4″ matt screen. I looked in local Aople shop and all the product can be used as a mirror when off. Last edited by Quoth; 07-30-2024 at 05:13 PM. |
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07-30-2024, 05:08 PM | #11 | |
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Quote:
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07-30-2024, 05:09 PM | #12 |
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@Pw23 Where is it you do get your eBooks from (so we can see how best to advise you)? What iPhone do you have? Can it create a hotspot?
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07-30-2024, 06:05 PM | #13 |
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Thanks for the replies
I do have Wi-Fi and access to an iMac but I prefer not to use it as it's difficult for me and I just use my iPhone 15+ to download Books From t Op rrenta/Foreign I downloaded to the phone and AirDrop it to my iPad Air4 Can this be done with other e-readers that have Bluetooth? Has it very convenient for me? Besides thex boox mox note 3, are there any other 10 inch he readers that are better? If all 10 inch readers have the pen/stylus, that's fine I just don't require colour if B&W is better quality My budget would be £400-500, I am in the UK As I'm in the Apple ecosystem, I'd prefer not to go for android he The iPad is always on a stand, so I never have to hold it so the 10 inch size isn't a problem for me Thanks |
07-30-2024, 06:41 PM | #14 |
Wizard
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If you want Bluetooth, the Kobo Elipsa 2E supports audiobooks and is not Android, but the NA3 has an actual speaker in addition to Bluetooth. There are no e-paper devices that integrate with Apple products, since Apple doesn't make any such devices.
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07-30-2024, 07:04 PM | #15 |
the rook, bossing Never.
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No Kobo accepts files by bluetooth.
They can download via WiFi using the limited functionality Browser. |
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