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March 07, 2026 - @164.77 (what is this?)
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| | |-+  E-Readers - Do you use one and are they still the future of books?


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Poll
Question: Do you use an e-reader?
Yes often!   -17 (30.9%)
No Never!   -9 (16.4%)
I used to but I don't anymore.   -6 (10.9%)
I have one but I use it occasionally.   -10 (18.2%)
I dont have one, but I do read a lot on a phone or tablet!   -13 (23.6%)
Total Members Voted: 52

Author Topic: E-Readers - Do you use one and are they still the future of books?  (Read 6106 times)
thefanciestpigeon
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« Reply #30 on: February 12, 2026 @960.61 »

Idk what's wrong with me (lighthearted) but I can't seem to read e-books usually, my reading comprehension plummets the moment I can't read something as a physical book. short form writing (like on the internet) is fine but I struggle a lot even with long-form internet writing such as a long fanfic. I took a class where one of the books was out of print and only available as an ebook and the essay I wrote about it was a lot worse than the essays I wrote for that class with books I could get physically, and I see that as proof of how it affects what I retain from a book.

I love the idea of e-readers, I like having so many books in such a small amount of space, and being able to take them all with me and the accessibility of not needing to physically go to the store/library, but in practice they just take so much more effort for me to use that they aren't worth it unless I have no other way to read a book.
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« Reply #31 on: February 15, 2026 @901.74 »

What ereader do you have, and how do you manage to get books from websites like this.

After looking into a bunch of modern ereaders i decided i just want something simple that works and doesn't have a million extra features (also true of every electronic device i buy (or haven't bought because i can't find a simple one)). So i got a used Sony PRS-505 (discontinued 2009). It's not perfect but it's fine for most books (barring PDFs with tiny text or one really large book that crashes it). Plus it was about the same price as a not-super-old Kobo ereader.

As for putting books on it, it's very simple. I go to Project Gutenberg (https://gutenberg.org), download a book as an .epub file, and then plug my ereader into my laptop with the USB-mini cord it came with. It opens like any storage drive, i make a folder for the author (optional, to keep things organized), and copy the dowloaded .epub over. When i unplug the ereader it scans its internal storage and SD card for new books and adds them to the list.

I've never owned a Kindle so i don't know if it supports just plugging it into a computer and copying a file over.

I don't really like my Kindle and how Amazon runs it but I am against the idea of getting a new one when I have a perfectly good Kindle. I don't like spending unnecessary money. But morally, my soul is crying every time I buy a book from Amazon. :,(

See if there's some way to borrow ebooks from your local public library and download them straight to your Kindle, like Overdrive or Libby.

I also have heard you can use Calibre to convert your ebooks from Amazon's proprietary format to a regular, DRM-free epub in case you ever do get a non-Amazon ereader.

You could try to jailbreak your Kindle if you want to be able to sideload extra apps, mess with fonts and screensevers, etc. But that's not something i know anything about.

[I did first put this in the thread i'm quoting from, but i think it fits here too.]
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rolypolyphonic
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« Reply #32 on: February 17, 2026 @750.25 »

I do not read a lot but I recently acquired an e-reader (one of the ancient Sony ones) and while I still do not read that much, it has really helped a lot in making it more tolerable. Typical phone screens cause too much eye-strain and I honestly hate physical books, as unpopular an opinion that is. I also like the Sony's form factor and physical buttons a lot, and it is a shame they are now discontinued and that new e-readers don't really have the same layout of buttons.

Even if I did like physical books, they are very expensive, and I live in the middle of nowhere where I can't just drop by a library. I think the option to download nearly any book I want is a life-saver because I am a very discriminate reader. I think on top of all the things I need to do, I don't have the time to 'just read' anything and everything so it's really great for me to be able to conveniently load up a curated selection instead of relying on whatever's available/popular/new the way I would have to if I went to a library or bookstore.
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« Reply #33 on: February 18, 2026 @224.85 »

i was gonna answer "yes often" on the poll
but then looking through the other answers, i realized you meant a physical e-reader & not just software for e-books  :drat:
in which case, no not really
however i do think it brings up an interesting question: do software like calibre and pdf readers count?
i'm curious if other people think they do or not
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norbezjones
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« Reply #34 on: March 06, 2026 @757.40 »

I used to e-read in the Kindle app on my phone, but ever since I started doing book reviews and e-reading more, I've discovered how hard that is on the eyes.  I decided to purchase a Kindle device, specifically this one, and I also picked up a case for it too! #notsponsored
Overall, I like it, mainly for the fact I can read at night without my phone screen screen blinding me and keeping me awake.  It also doesn't have the Kindle app bug that happens when you try to highlight lines at the bottom of the page--on the app, it can move onto the next page and highlight everything there, which is annoying.  Not so much on the device.  As a result, I highlight more and make more notes than I did before, which is very helpful for my book reviews.
I would like to decouple from Amazon though at some point.  Does anyone know if there's an e-reader that tracks your time read per book?  I'm very interested in something like that, and it doesn't really exist on Kindle, especially if you import a lot of epubs like I do.  They have the "Reading Challenges" thing on the app, yes, but it's not very robust or sophisticated (which is quite the understatement).
Also, responding to lakes' question:
however i do think it brings up an interesting question: do software like calibre and pdf readers count?
i'm curious if other people think they do or not
I think they count?  I suppose it brings up the difference between an e-reader, and an e reading device.  What are y'alls thoughts on that?
(Also hi, this is my first post on this forum I think?  I should probably write a proper intro somewhere if I haven't already...
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