Adrian Covert | Gizmodo
Barnes and Noble’s Simple Touch Nook is not a reinvention of the e-reader in any way. It’s not even an evolution. It’s a refinement, and a very good one at that.
Why It Matters: The Nook dispels the notion that all e-readers have to be long and slim, instead opting for a squatter, bulkier body that’s still a full ounce lighter than Amazon Kindle. It runs Android, but you’ll never notice that. They’re not concerned with making the Nook a do-everything device. The battery is rated for two months of use between charges. And it uses a new proprietary screen technology that refreshes pages faster, with less flashing.
Using It: The Simple Touch feels like it was designed to stay out the reader’s way. When you pick the Nook up, the first thing to grab your attention is the rubberized, carved-out backing that gives your fingers something to grab onto. The feeling is akin to folding a magazine back on itself. And despite the shorter body, the screen is the same 6-inch Pearl e-ink display as the Kindle, which ensures that text is plenty big, sharp and contrasty.
Also, the Nook is light. Even after an hour of reading, you’ll hardly feel fatigued or bothered having this thing in your hand. If you’re walking about town with this thing in one hand, it feels more or less like a small book. When your arm swings It never feels as though it’s trying to escape your hand, and any movement of your wrist is unencumbered.
There are a myriad of options for navigation. There’s a handy center button that always has you a click and a tap away from your library or the Nook store. While reading, you can use the touchscreen (which is powered by a similar IR ring technology as the touch Kobo) to swipe and tap through menus and pages. Alternately, you can use the buttons on either side of the bezel to move through content. People with smaller hands might find one-handed page turning to be a challenge, but for the most part, either method is equally convenient.
Barnes and Noble Simple Touch Nook
Price: $140
Screen: 6-inch, Pearl display
Weight: 7.48 ounces
Processor and RAM: 800 MHz TI OMAP III processor
Storage Capacity: 2GB
Connectivity: Wi-fi, MicroSD, Micro USB
Formats: ePub, PDF, JPEG, PNG, BMP, GIF
Like: The battery. Barnes and Noble says that if you use the Nook for 30-60 minutes a day, read a page a minute, and leave the wi-fi off, the battery will last two months. Recharge time takes 3 hours. What that means is that the battery is never really a concern. And when you notice it getting low, you probably still have a week’s worth of life in it.
Page refreshing on the Simple Touch is certainly faster than the Kindle. For actual reading it’s more or less negligible that the Nook display refreshes a hair faster and only flashes after 5 or 6 page turns. But only when you start scrolling through pages en masse, do you appreciate the faster refresh times which allow you to flip through a book like its nothing.
The wider, thicker, lighter body of the Nook provides more room for your thumb and the base of your hand to rest along the front bezel without blocking the screen. There’s also no hardware keyboard. If you type a lot with an e-reader, you might miss the hardware keyboard of the Kindle. But if you’re mostly just using it to search out books, it’s wasted space and weight. There’s also no weighty resistance from the half of the device that isn’t in your hand.
No Like: The Nook touchscreen functions as well as this IR technology ever will (which is to say it will never supplant capacitive touchpanels). But between the IR touch tech, and the page refresh there’s a slight hiccup in the time between your tap and the actual action being carried out. Once you learn to trust that the Simple Touch registered your tap, things feel smoother, but still, there’s an overall disconnected feeling. When you get into more advanced actions, such as highlighting text, things get imprecise and frustrating. Furthermore, the screen is semi-glossy; so if you’re reading under direct sunlight, it will reflect off the screen and block out the text. But it’s hardly the only e-ink reader with that problem.
Should I Buy It: Absolutely. If you’re looking for a no-nonsense e-reader that’s easy to use, connects to an online book store, handles your side-loaded content (like PDFs), let you interact with other friends who use the Nook store, and rarely has to be charged up, you will love the Simple Touch Nook. In terms of form and design and guts, the hardware is superior to the Kindle. The offerings from the Nook and Kindle stores are more or less the same, with a small handful of exclusive content from magazines and journals. But each store offers roughly a million books in their store, along with another million books that are free in the public domain. So you don’t really lose either way.
Additional research and reporting by Kyle Wagner
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