You need to either remove the DRM & convert, or jailbreak the Nook & install the Kindle for Android application.Can you read Kindle stuff on a Nook?
Any Adobe ePub book (like those from Kobo) can be read on a Nook (once you have the Nook authorized to your Adobe account).
Nook books can be read on devices & in software using the newest version of Adobe's software, but as far as I know only software readers like Bluefire Reader (on iPhone and Android) have updated, and none of the other hardware readers have bothered yet.
That's correct. If you want to stop there that's fine. If you want a more detailed explanation of each, read on.So that means the DRM is tied to Adobe the company and not Barnes and Noble or other ePub format ebook sellers? Sorry, just trying to understand the model.
And that guarantees you'll be good forever.Fortunately I am able to remove the drm and convert as necessary.
It is stretching the definition more than a little, but it really is a much more limited format. I'm fundamentally opposed to any format that limits my ability to choose how and when I use it though.
I'm not sure I would want my book collection to rely purely on one company maintaining it's interest in the ebook market. Who can say if they'll be a major player in 10 - 20 years time. If you've bought an epub book it's more likely readable in that kind of time frame than a proprietary format. Will Amazon still be producing the hardware then? Do you want to bet your carefully acquired book collection on that?
That may have been true at one point, but the new nook honestly is goddamn impressive if all you want is a reader. Makes my old nook look like an antique.It is stretching the definition more than a little, but it really is a much more limited format. I'm fundamentally opposed to any format that limits my ability to choose how and when I use it though.
I don't disagree at all. While I do believe the Kindle's hardware is the best on the market...
You technically have no right to those files once they're outside the Amazon ecosystem though. You may as well be downloading pirated files as far as the law is concerned.Well, I feel better about Amazon's commitment to their one and only product and their financial future than I do Barnes and Noble, but, that being said I'm not banking on that device for my library. I strip all the DRM from all the books I purchase and I let Calibre manage my library. If I decide to port to another device, I just plug it into the computer and put my books where I want them.
Based upon the description of the way ePub DRM is implemented on the B&N devices then I believe this applies to Nook books too.You technically have no right to those files once they're outside the Amazon ecosystem though. You may as well be downloading pirated files as far as the law is concerned.
You technically have no right to those files once they're outside the Amazon ecosystem though. You may as well be downloading pirated files as far as the law is concerned.Well, I feel better about Amazon's commitment to their one and only product and their financial future than I do Barnes and Noble, but, that being said I'm not banking on that device for my library. I strip all the DRM from all the books I purchase and I let Calibre manage my library. If I decide to port to another device, I just plug it into the computer and put my books where I want them.
That may have been true at one point, but the new nook honestly is goddamn impressive if all you want is a reader. Makes my old nook look like an antique.
You technically have no right to those files once they're outside the Amazon ecosystem though. You may as well be downloading pirated files as far as the law is concerned
They can at least be unlocked on non-B&N devices, if not many at the moment.Based upon the description of the way ePub DRM is implemented on the B&N devices then I believe this applies to Nook books too.You technically have no right to those files once they're outside the Amazon ecosystem though. You may as well be downloading pirated files as far as the law is concerned.
I'm not bothered about the buttons either way, but I have an aversion to touch technology....
I'm not going to buy the Kindle 4 unless I can exchange the 3 for it, but I'll to have a look at it and play around with it to see if it really is enough of an improvement.
Not sure if anyone is interested, but I just posted a large review of the current Kindle on my blog. In short, I really like it, and while it isn't the same as a real book, it's not a bad substitution. You can read the much more in-depth review here: http://frenchfriedgeek.wordpress.com/2011/08/21/the-amazon-kindle-a-library-in-your-hand/
Cheers!
The Kindle is not perfect, but I would say that it may be the best e-reader currently available. The reading experience is excellent, highlighted by the quality screen combined with the font and text customizations.
The Kindle does not have font customizations. You cannot change the font. Other readers/formats (ePub) can, but not the Kindle. So that is incorrect information.
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