Comment by neves

21 hours ago

Does anyone has experience with Android e-ink ebook readers? Are they worth it?

Brazilian Government just released a great public library of e-books: https://meclivros.mec.gov.br/

An Android e-ink reader would be perfect for it. And I'd use kindle app to read my kindle ebooks. But I don't really see people using them.

I bought a second hand Meebook M6 on ebay. At least, it was listed as second hand but seemed to be fresh out of the box when it arrived. I completely love it.

For actually reading ebooks, I'm using Koreader instead of the built-in reader because I find the UI a bit easier to get my head around. I mostly use it for PDFs related to classroom learning, but have the odd epub knocking around from project gutenburg etc.

It has Google Play support, so I can use the Libby app to access my local library's ebook collection (including offline access to travel guides - so useful). I also use the Sefaria app to read Hebrew scripture (also supports offline). These apps tend to use the battery faster than Koreader and having scrolling controls instead of page-turning controls is a bit of a pain, but quite manageable.

I haven't tried the Kindle app, but I'm sure it would work fine.

This seems to be a hot e-reader right now:

https://www.reddit.com/r/xteinkereader/

  • I really don’t understand the hype of that product.

    It’s like an entrepreneur with social media marketing skills came across a container full of really cheap small eink displays, then designed a product and marketing around it.

    • The reason it's trending right now is because it's a convenient price, simple to use and making people read more because of its size. If it helps people cut down on phone use then it's a good product.

      The build quality could be better, but there doesn't exist a similar product with better build quality.

      Can you build a DIY version that's significantly cheaper?

      Well, this was my thinking for getting one, we shall see when it arrives :P

      Edit: Also you can choose to install a nice open source community firmware

I use a Boox and really like it, but it's definitely not the same price point as a kindle. It has a stylus but I basically use it exclusively for reading.

I use a Boox Note Air Plus 2. Love the thing.

It's 10 inches, which I find to be a bit too large for an E-Reader. But for surfing the web and note taking this is a terrific device. Boox has smaller Android devices.

I just bought a boox go color 2. Kindle form factor, color e-ink screen, runs android, supports stylus.

I don't know if I love it yet but I read seven ebooks in a month on it, so I guess it's been a good purchase. The android kindle app has a neat smooth scrolling feature that works really well.