If you want a cheap one, you should look into the Kobo, which is marketed by Borders.
Amazon tends to make Kindle announcements without many hints beforehand. Hard to say when we'll see a new one.
I was really excited for the Kobo, too, until I read MANY reviews claiming the physical button used to turn pages and stuff feels extremely cheap and uncomfortable.
The Nook seems like a great option but I know that a Nook 2 would have all the kinks worked out so I am tempted to wait and hope for a new one and the Kindle is great- but many articles point toward there being a new Kindle Lite, perhaps a touch-screen Kindle, or something else. Those changes are so big that if I knew when to expect one I'd probably wait... hmm... maybe I will just get a Kindle now and ebay it later.
Or one of the Sony readers.
Personally, I don't like that every major book dealer wants to market an ebook reader. They'd be better off letting Amazon and B&N do the hefty lifting with designing the hardware and distributing the device, then inking a deal to produce content for it.
I'm confused. You mean Borders should hire authors to write books? They're a bookstore, not a publishing company. And last I heard, Borders wasn't doing too well. The Kobo seems like a good strategy - good or bad, it's more than $100 cheaper than the Kindle and Nook, so there are bound to be some people interested in it.
I was really excited for the Kobo, too, until I read MANY reviews claiming the physical button used to turn pages and stuff feels extremely cheap and uncomfortable.
The Nook seems like a great option but I know that a Nook 2 would have all the kinks worked out so I am tempted to wait and hope for a new one and the Kindle is great- but many articles point toward there being a new Kindle Lite, perhaps a touch-screen Kindle, or something else. Those changes are so big that if I knew when to expect one I'd probably wait... hmm... maybe I will just get a Kindle now and ebay it later.