Does anyone here have a BOOX e-paper tablet? I’m a big fan of e-paper devices—I love my Pebble smartwatch, Kindle Paperwhite, and Light Phone II. I’ve been eyeing the Tab Ultra C for quite a while, and I am considering the pros and cons. Mostly, I intend to use it for browsing the web and maybe some light note taking and document writing.

    • farsinuce@feddit.dk
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      11 months ago

      Yeah, I haven’t read good things about Onyx either. Chinese-inside™. Scummy business practices.

      I prefer Kobo as an alternative.

  • esaru@beehaw.org
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    11 months ago

    The color screen of e-readers is too dark for me and substantially lacks contrast. It’s very noticable. The layer for pen recognition already makes the screen darker, but the color display is adding a lot more to the darkness and lack of contrast. I would only go with an e-reader with black/white screen and even without pen recognition.

    Furthermore, e-readers are much more fragile than mobile phones. The design of their screen leads to a high probability of getting broken which is a common thing, search “ereader screen broken” online. My Boox e-reader fell 50 centimeters and the screen was broken, which renders the whole devide unresponsive.

    The pen recognition is not as precise as on tablets. You can draw with it, but it’s a bit annoying and not for detailed work.

    So my suggestion is to go with a device that costs less than 200 USD and do anything else than reading on a phone or tablet.

  • ɔiƚoxɘup@beehaw.org
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    11 months ago

    I would only get one if it also had a backlit display. Preferably amber

    This article has some useful considerations.

    Happy shopping.

      • Keith@lemmy.zip
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        11 months ago

        What? You absolutely can. Look at… Every recent model of kindle.

        • zzzzz@beehaw.org
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          11 months ago

          E-ink displays are opaque. The Kindles with illumination use side-lighting with a layer of plastic that guides the light across the surface of the device. They are effectively front-lit using LEDs situated around the perimeter of the screen.

          • Overzeetop@beehaw.org
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            11 months ago

            The use of the term backlight is common, but even Amazon refers to it as a “front light” (it’s edge-lit, of course, as you say). Bit like using a floppy disc as the “save” icon, or walling wireless networks “wi-fi” despite having nothing to to with “fidelity”. We all know what it means.

            • zzzzz@beehaw.org
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              11 months ago

              We all know what it means.

              Except for me, apparently. I’ll have to update my vocabulary: backlight can mean front light.

              • Overzeetop@beehaw.org
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                11 months ago

                I get it…it’s hard to say something you know is incorrect, accuracy of language going to shit and other modern problems, and I feel that. I think of it as more of a “internal lighting that illuminates the device interface.” In dealing with non-technical people on a daily basis, I find it’s much more productive to allow/ignore this sort of colloquialism unless it’s that specific thing I’m trying to fix/undo/explain. I barely even flinch now when people refer to the large box on their deck as the “CPU.” ;-)