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Are the current ebook readers good enough for reading programming books (containing diagrams, source-code, screenshots, and so on)? How good are the search functions or the possibilities to set bookmarks, to use a book as a reference?

I'd like to hear opinions of ebook reader owners to help me decide whether or not I should buy an ebook reader.

(I know this question already exists, but it's over one year old and new ebook readers are now available)

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8 Answers

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Very subjective. Nothing I've used yet has been good enough for me.

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This article may help:

http://gizmodo.com/5152092/giz-explains-why-there-isnt-a-perfect-ebook-reader

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I'm waiting on the CrunchPad. I think it reads E-books. Really hoping its hackable enough to do so if it doesn't out of the box.

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I use Mobipocket Reader on my Blackberry for books. While the phone's are limited in resolution, any images included in the document can be rendered (that I've seen). It's worked well for me so far, and I can import from a lot of different sources to the desktop program.

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I own a Sony Reader PRS-505. I can't compare it with other ebook readers because it's the only one I've used.

I do use it to read programming books, but it can become frustrating really fast. In my experience, code samples are mostly illegible on the screen. Sometimes the structure of the snippet can be restored by zooming out, but at the expense of having to look at microscopic characters.

No search function, slow turning of pages at times, etc. These things are in their infancy and it shows.

That said I'm happy with it as a portable library. I carry many books with me that I can glance over anytime I'm free. You can always pick up something you didn't know even if the reading experience leaves a lot to be desired.

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Thanks. Which model of the sony readers do you own? – Martin Oct 12 at 20:11
Edited the question to add reader model. – guillermooo Oct 12 at 21:04
I was thinking of getting a Sony to read books in pdf format downloaded from Safari Online. Does the Sony have problems rendering complex pdfs as well? Thanks. – Steve Oct 22 at 23:01
@Steve: Most likely, pictures, tables, code listings, etc. won't display tidy on the screen if your zoom isn't set to the min level. – guillermooo Oct 23 at 8:30
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I have bought a few of the O'reilly books for use on the iPhone.

They aren't perfect by any means but the convenience makes it worthwhile. The text size is adjustable and the images seem to display OK

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If you want to buy commercial ebooks then amazon's kindle seems to be the obvious choice. The way it delivers books using Whispernet make it easy to use and you can buy stuff via your standard amazon account. I know that the harware isn't as good as it could be and some people are worried that Amazon is getting a monopoly worse than google - but it seemd to be inevitable. Why Kindle is the answer

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I use Google Reader on mobile phones a lot (Nokia E51, G1) and it's hard to read any source code on small screen (even on 3.2" screen of G1).

I would invest into Kindle DX (if you live in US) following recommendation of Scott Hanselman.

Kindle is now available in many countries and Kindle DX version can even show any PDF emailed to it.

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