Yup, I got a Kobo e-reader for most of my reading pleasures, though not all. We need a step between "some" and "all" there in that poll. I couldn't read ebooks on anything other than an e-ink reader. Reading on a regular LED-screen is very fatiguing for the eyes.
It saves me a lot of money on printing school texts, since gutenberg.com has most the philosophical texts we need to read in .epub format, and books in general. Space-wise too. When I travel back to my parents' place I don't have much space in my bags, and a slim e-reader with a crapton of books that goes in my pants pocket wins over a ton of paperbacks any day of the week.
Plus, here in my small student apartment I'm running out of shelf space, and an e-reader is a great help with that. I like having books on shelves mind you, I love looking at my probably 1st/2nd/3rd print of Steinbeck's The Wayward Bus for instance. You can't have that with ebooks alright.
It saves me a lot of money on printing school texts, since gutenberg.com has most the philosophical texts we need to read in .epub format, and books in general. Space-wise too. When I travel back to my parents' place I don't have much space in my bags, and a slim e-reader with a crapton of books that goes in my pants pocket wins over a ton of paperbacks any day of the week.
Plus, here in my small student apartment I'm running out of shelf space, and an e-reader is a great help with that. I like having books on shelves mind you, I love looking at my probably 1st/2nd/3rd print of Steinbeck's The Wayward Bus for instance. You can't have that with ebooks alright.
Try an e-ink reader if you want a decent ereading experience. It's pretty much the same as reading a book, like seeing letters printed on a plastic card instead of regular display.Fdzzaigl said:Tried it a few times, but I honestly can't stand them. It feels totally weird and is very fatigueing for the eyes. Although I do read a lot of e-comics.