- May 19, 2011
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A few people I know have a Kindle. IMO while there are a few appreciable aspects of the design (long battery life, easier to read in sunlit areas), it has always bothered me how low-resolution the text quality was, as well as how long the screen took to update from one page to another. Perhaps the low-end CPU and the poor quality screen (by mobile/tablet standards) are what help the Kindle to keep its power usage low, but anyway.
Admittedly it would have to be a pretty compelling argument for me to stop using my Nexus 5 for ebook reading and shell out for a Kindle, but I'm curious: Have the more recent Kindles improved wrt the points I mentioned?
From my minimal usage of Kindles, it seems like some screen contents can take multiple seconds to update (responding to a screen touch, loading a store page, turning a book page, etc).
Admittedly it would have to be a pretty compelling argument for me to stop using my Nexus 5 for ebook reading and shell out for a Kindle, but I'm curious: Have the more recent Kindles improved wrt the points I mentioned?
From my minimal usage of Kindles, it seems like some screen contents can take multiple seconds to update (responding to a screen touch, loading a store page, turning a book page, etc).