vote up 5 vote down star

I'm interested in purchasing an e-book reader, mainly for reading programming related e-books.

Up until now, e-book readers seemed to have a pretty bad reputation. I wonder if this situation has changed and anyone had any good experience with any of them and might provide some helpful advice in selecting one.

Thanks

flag

not really programming related. – John Nolan Jan 20 at 11:53
You can't just add "for reading programming e-books" to a non-programming question and make it relevant. – Paul Tomblin Jan 20 at 11:56
I tried several book readers (like Sony PRS505) none of them is really suitable because 99% of technical e-books use pdf/chm and these devices just can't handle them (they have weak cpu, slow e-ink screens, etc) – aku Jan 20 at 11:57
@John Nolan - that is somewhat true, nonetheless, e-book readers are used by programmers more than anyone else I know and I'd like some opinions from someone that has used them to read programming books. – Pop Catalin Jan 20 at 11:57
Considering the vast majority of ebooks I (and my colleagues) encounter are programming/technical in focus, this question is absolutely valid. – Ash Jan 20 at 12:08

5 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

Don't buy a dedicated e-book reader. Instead look at any of the netbook type laptop PCs avaialable at the moment. Reasons:

  • A netbook can run a full OS such as XP.
  • All formats supported on a normal OS can therefore be viewed on your netbook.
  • Price of a netbook is very competitive compared with dedicated e-book readers.
  • Common netbook screen resolution of 1024 x 600 is good for comfortable reading.
  • I own a netbook and have been using it for exactly this purpose.
link|flag
hmmm, interesting, guess the reputation following e-book readers hasn't changed much in the past year. Thanks for your advice, I'll definitely consider this. – Pop Catalin Jan 20 at 12:02
I've gotta disagree. I spend so much time in front of a screen, that I want to give my eyes a chance to rest. Readers that use e-ink are SO much easier on the eyes its not even funny, not to mention battery life is much better. Personally, I have an Amazon Kindle, and I love it. – jvenema Mar 25 at 21:37
vote up 3 vote down

I bought a Sony PRS505 for the same reason, and had the same doubts. But reading from an e-book is much easier / comfortable than reading from a screen, or printing the documents (that you maybe only read once).

It is true that some pdf's are not rendered correctly, but in that case I play a little bit with the zoom level. There are also a lot of tools to make the device even more useful (reading blogs...)

Sony has now a newer model with touchscreen. I you want to take notes or search in PDF's, you'll need this model. Otherwise take the PRS505, cheaper and a clearer screen. The overlay for the touchscreen causes sometimes some reflection and makes it less clear.

Conclusion: very happy PRS505 owner...

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

I have the Sony PRS505 and wouldn't be without it.

I also have the Asus Eee PC but wouldn't want to try to use this for reading an eBook while standing up on a crwded train during my daily commute.

link|flag
Paul I have PRS505 too, what e-book format do you use? Since all my e-books are pdf/chm I can't read them in Sony reader. Also there is a problem with scaling - html/pdf layouts are hard to downscale to fit reader's screen – aku Jan 20 at 12:52
I read PDFs quite well on my PRS505. I just completed a course with the Open University and the reading materials were supplied in PDF format as well as on paper. I did my studying for the course almost exclusively using my PRS505 during my commute to work. – Paul Mitchell Jan 20 at 13:34
I believe (but could be wrong) that you can use this tool calibre.kovidgoyal.net to reformat PDFs to suit the PRS505 screen. I haven't found this to be necessary yet but maybe I've just been lucky that the files I've had have already fitted it quite well. – Paul Mitchell Jan 20 at 13:35
thanks you, I'll take a look at this tool. – aku Jan 20 at 14:17
vote up 1 vote down

I really love my Amazon Kindle but I have to admit that it handles code formatting and illustrations pretty poorly.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

One thing to consider is whether your local public library or university library has a paid subscription to Safari Books Online. Many do and the subscriptions are under-used. They're often happy to set you up with an unlimited account to the entire Safari library. And, there's a Safari iPhone app for reading.

http://my.safaribooksonline.com/

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.