Are e-book readers good enough for tech books? - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2009-12-01T08:33:10Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/17761http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/17761/are-e-book-readers-good-enough-for-tech-books13Are e-book readers good enough for tech books?odd parity2008-08-20T11:21:36Z2009-05-09T01:22:42Z
<p>I was wondering if the current generation of e-book readers (like the Kindle, or Sony's Reader) are big/high-res enough that you can comfortably use them for large paper-size PDFs, like most programming and other technical books? I've bought a few PDF books from Pragmatic Bookshelf lately, and it would be nice to have something to read them on that is smaller and cooler than a laptop and not backlit :-)</p>
<p>Does anyone have experience with this?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17761/are-e-book-readers-good-enough-for-tech-books/17764#177642Answer by Vaibhav for Are e-book readers good enough for tech books?Vaibhav2008-08-20T11:25:39Z2008-08-20T11:25:39Z<p>Here are a couple of posts on this topic by a very technical guy:</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.hanselman.com/blog/AmazonKindle.aspx" rel="nofollow">http://www.hanselman.com/blog/AmazonKindle.aspx</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.hanselman.com/blog/SonyReaderAndAmazonKindleWillEBooksHappenThisTime.aspx" rel="nofollow">http://www.hanselman.com/blog/SonyReaderAndAmazonKindleWillEBooksHappenThisTime.aspx</a></li>
</ul>
<p>This should answer your questions.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17761/are-e-book-readers-good-enough-for-tech-books/17784#177845Answer by Cheekysoft for Are e-book readers good enough for tech books?Cheekysoft2008-08-20T11:43:19Z2008-08-20T11:54:48Z<p>My experience is that they are not quite there yet, and are still pretty overpriced. I have an <a href="http://www.irextechnologies.com/products/iliad" rel="nofollow">iRex Iliad</a>, which I am very much in love with. The screen is just amazing. So easy to read, even midday outside in the screaming sunshine. I use it a lot to read both regular books and technical papers, hell sometimes even long web pages or html-based documentation / tutorials. </p>
<p>However with good tech books I find that I read very differently to more normal "serial" material. I often skip to read or re-read parts of chapters that could be a long way back or a long way ahead of my current position. I often also use them as reference. This is where most of the reading software in these devices falls down. Bookmarking and search is generally very weak, and this impedes the way that I like to "read" tech books.</p>
<p>This is improving, and I like the Iliad as it is a pretty regular linux device with an X server, so better custom reading <a href="http://wiki.mobileread.com/wiki/Iliad_Software" rel="nofollow">software</a> is being compiled and released by the <a href="http://www.mobileread.com/" rel="nofollow">community</a> all the time. Sadly, it's also the most expensive by far, as it has a much larger screen and a wacom pen tablet built in.</p>
<p>Unless you want to treat yourself with a new toy to play with -- because the technology is awesome, in the very real sense of the word --then my advice is to wait for the next generation, as there are still some issues to be ironed out in the current gen of these new devices.</p>
<p><em>* Edit *</em></p>
<p>Additionally, whilst the screens look very impressive, most e-readers have a screen update time of around the 1-2 second mark. So flipping pages to find that paragraph or table you want to look at again, is really not a very good option. :-( Hopefully in the later releases of the e-ink technology, this will improve.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17761/are-e-book-readers-good-enough-for-tech-books/17815#178152Answer by kaplooeymom for Are e-book readers good enough for tech books?kaplooeymom2008-08-20T12:10:02Z2008-08-20T12:10:02Z<p>2nd hand experience here - my husband the uber tech had a Sony reader for just his prupose for 19 months, for cisco and other router/switch hardware technical publications. He recently "upgraded" to a kindle. No more technical books on paper for him, he says, if they're available as ebooks. With the sony, he had to futz with the margins to make it work, but the Kindle adjusts automagically. </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17761/are-e-book-readers-good-enough-for-tech-books/453416#4534160Answer by epotter for Are e-book readers good enough for tech books?epotter2009-01-17T15:08:06Z2009-01-17T15:08:06Z<p>While I generally agreed with Cheekysoft, I wanted to provide my experience with the Sony PRS 505. The Sony doesn't have a touch input or as large of a screen as the Iliad, but it is much more affordable. I love mine and use it all the time.</p>
<p>Books are the best when you can get them in the base Sony format (lrf), but the selection is limited. I've read a few books in pdf and it's not bad. The best way I've found to read pdf is to put the device in landscape mode. This way, you see the full width of the page, half of the page at a time. I've read a few books like this and have thought it went pretty well. </p>
<p>Like Cheeky said, the big issue is that you can't jump around as easily as you can in a paper book. The prs505 has a book mark feature that helps, but it is not as easy and being able to put a sticky note on a page and flip back to it whenever you want to.</p>
<p>When I find a large pdf that I need to read, given the choice between reading on my laptop, printing it off, or reading it on my ebook reader, the reader wins every time.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17761/are-e-book-readers-good-enough-for-tech-books/842412#8424122Answer by Steve Rowe for Are e-book readers good enough for tech books?Steve Rowe2009-05-09T00:49:28Z2009-05-09T00:49:28Z<p>The <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Kindle-DX-Amazons-Wireless-Generation/dp/B0015TCML0/" rel="nofollow">Kindle DX</a> was just announced and is explicitly designed to handle pdf documents well. The initial reviews look very promising. It's also a whole lot cheaper than the Iliad mentioned above. This looks like the one to get for technical materials.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17761/are-e-book-readers-good-enough-for-tech-books/842462#8424621Answer by cletus for Are e-book readers good enough for tech books?cletus2009-05-09T01:22:42Z2009-05-09T01:22:42Z<p>I have a Sony Reader PRS-505. It has a reasonably small screen but that's fine for its intended purpose: reading novels largely to and from work.</p>
<p>You can put technical books on it but the smaller screen tends to be a real issue. There are larger models like the iRex iliad and the newly announced Kindle DX but I think these readers are still unsuitable for several reasons:</p>
<ol>
<li>I find myself flicking around a lot in technical books. I will look for a particular topic in the index or just flick through the pages of a particular chapter until I find what I'm looking for. Paper really still is the best for this and a computer is the next best thing;</li>
<li>The displays are slow to refresh;</li>
<li>They lack colour. This isn't usually important in programming books but could be in say Web design books, books about Photoshop and so on;</li>
<li>Even if I'm reading sequentially I'll often refer to code snippets, tables, charts, etc on other pages; and</li>
<li>Searching is hard (or at least harder than with a paper book).</li>
</ol>