I want to get more into reading but books can be expensive and bulky.
I thought I'd buy a Kindle (or similar) since those screens are pleasant to read on, but I don't know if there's anything specific I should be looking for piracy wise.
Apparently amazon has added support for epubs so I'm hoping it'll make it easier to load with my own downloaded books?
Also, the version names/models of kindles are crap.
Edit2: I've decided I'll buy a paperwhite kindle (2020 version). I found a 2nd hand one, like new, for 80€ with a screen protector + magnetic cover.
This way I'm still not supporting amazon :)
Edit: I seem to have posted this same/similar question yesterday but I have no recollection of doing so.
If this is something you're interested have a look at that post.
Basically there's Kobo and Kindle where I'm at that are good. For me I like a bit more premium stuff in terms of having decent build quality etc and that means it's either Kindle Paperwhite or Kobo Libre 2 that fits me. Both have proprietary shit software and their own bookstore but both can be side loaded. I generally prefer buying tried and tested hardware even if there probably exist some niche fully open source device out there but they tend to cost a lot more due to lacking scale of production. I wouldn't however buy either of those new. I've setup reminders on second hand websites in my area and waiting till I find one in a good condition/price. Where I'm at that means for a almost unused device it should be about 10-20% below lowest historic price new. And older models around 50% below cost of a new model, naturally with a lot of variance depending on condition etc.
I've just found a paperwhite (2020version) great condition, with one magnetic cover for 80€. That's about 40€ cheaper than amazon's and I'm not even sure if they include the cover.
Definitely the Kobo Libra 2 or the Kobo Nia. I bought both a Kindle and a Kobo Libra 2 and ended up returning the Kindle because book piracy was a pain. The overall Kobo user experience is just a whole lot more pleasant.
Kobo consistently makes better products overall, but the ability to avoid Amazon (and the nonsense that comes from their proprietary format) is priceless.
I don't know if this is what you meant, but Amazon dropped support for mobi and switched to epub in late 2022, iirc. Not that this means you suddenly should start using Amazon or anything.
I have a Boox e-reader and love it. It's an Android e-ink device so you get the benefits of being able to load android apps in, and you can put pretty much any ebook on there. That includes loading the Kindle App for Kindle books, other stores e-readers if you don't want to strip DRM, and free readers like FBReader to read anything you want. They also have a colour device which is interesting for comics.
They have a range of devices, and I have a Boox Nova with FBReader (e-reader but not open source unfortunately) installed from the google play store on the device and Calibre on my PC (which is a cross-platform open source ebook management system). You can use Calibre to load and manage the books on your eReader, and manage and organize a big library of books on your PC or laptop.
It means I can read an ebook from any source (including bought on Amazon, ebooks I've bought in other stores android app, or in any app if I've removed the DRM from the book, and ePUBs or Mobi from anywhere in FBReader or your preferred ereader from the Play store) on one good e-ink device. You can probably side load Android APKs but I haven't tried that. It's also touch screen so can take notes and stuff on it. And because it's an Android device I can also browse the internet and use android app like email etc. But it's an e-ink device though so the screen isn't designed for rapidly refreshing content; some Apps look janky on it and you can watch videos on it but they look a bit janky. It's good for reading websites, news apps, PDFs, email; that kind of stuff. Not really good or intended for video, or games. It's a superb e-reader, but with the added freedom of android. No amazon lock-in, no Kobo lock-in.
They have range of stuff; the cheapest is their Leaf 2 - €240 which is 350 CAD or £210. But yes it is more expensive than Kobo and Amazon; I try to remember they subsidise their ebook readers as they want to lock you in to their stores, and the Boox is more versatile as an Android e-ink device. I haven't used the Leaf 2 myself, but the reviews I've found sound like it's a pretty good ereader.
If not interested in e-ink, then any good generic Android tablet beats out Kobo and Kindle devices for freedom and are comparable in price.
I have a kindle from like a decade ago. It works fine. I just today had the thought as I was carrying it from the beach “why would anyone replace an old kindle?” So my suggestion is get the cheapest oldest model you can.
Last week I updated my self hosted ebook library so I have calibre, calibre-web for a nicer front end, and readarr all working in tandem; it’s just about perfect. Books arrive magically on the device once they finish downloading and they download the instant they become available. I don’t know what else I’d want except for maybe a back light. But reading with actual natural light is a pleasure too.
Yeah I have a Kindle about that old and it still holds a charge for quite a while and works as well as when I bought it. It's really one of the better electronics purchases I've made. Does what its meant to well without a lot of frills and has lasted quite a while.
I've looked at the newer models with slight improvements but could not reasonable justify the upgrade at all.
The only feature worth upgrading my PaperWhite for would be better resolution and the warm color frontlighting. If they release a robust color kindle, I'll probably bite but I imagine Amazon isn't doing that because it would be the last kindle anyone buys.
You can jailbreak older software versions of kindle and install KoReader which is such a fantastic software. Open source and very feature rich https://github.com/koreader/koreader
Personally I would not buy kindle again as I just don’t want Amazon on my device at all.
I download EPUBs, use Calibre to convert them to MOBI so they will work on my Kindle Paperwhite, then either use Amazon’s mail to Kindle service or copy them directly to Kindle via USB.
Connect your ebook device to your PC running Calibre. Start Calibre, and when it recognises your device a new button will show for syncing with the device.
I convert my files to az3w as it displays the book cover on the lock screen. Not a big deal if you don’t pay for the ad free device or you don’t care, but I don’t think EPUB or mobi have that capability
I recommend getting the kids paperwhite. Comes ad free and with a good case. Just unsub from the kids book thing if you don’t want it. Paperwhites are backlit so I can fall asleep reading at night with no other lights on. The newer ones also support dark mode and usb-c, finally!
And only buy any Amazon devices when deeply discounted like on prime day.
Apparently on my other post (no clue what happened), people say that that's no longer the case.
As soon as you disable kids mode you get ads. You could try to call the support line and BS your way to free ad upgrade on it but I'm too lazy to do it tbh.
Oasis. It’s pricy but a good big screen and a grip down one side that makes it easy to hold for long periods. It also feels lighter than the other models. Mines from 2017 and still going strong.
I have a kindle I got in 2020 and no idea where it is. I also have a Kobo Libra 2 that I take with me everywhere. If you don't want to constantly battle with jailbreaking get a Kobo. The two books I have on Amazon I transferred on with calibre and dedrm plugin
Kindle plus calibre is a very nice setup. Since the base model got a back light, it’s all I need. Kindle is the one thing Amazon does okay, it works really well for reading books and it’s cheap. And it’s pretty easy to get books on it.
It would be just fine, but I do what the paper like screens (inkdot or wtv it's called).
Plus it'd consume my battery and I'm thinking of taking it to the beach so it's good that it has great angles.
Also, how common is telemetry on e-readers? Like will it send your reading list for targeted advertising somewhere?
Because that's what I'd worry about if you download illegally shared e-books
Personally I keep wifi turned off on mine anyway to preserve battery life and keep forced updates away. The only time I had wifi on was when I set the device up because that requires an account (for kobo readers). There is a quite technical way to bypass that though as far as I know.
Edit: After reading up on it, it seems like there is actually telemetry on kobo devices...
i never go online with kindle (don't need wiki ) but once i had to. it immediately downloaded anything from the amazon list (of bought/dl media) including reading samples. da** annoying.
i deleted everything on amazon.
then amazon stopped sending actual files when i bought a book. even when specifically transfer to pc or via usb was selected (can't remember the phrase). support was useless. i stopped buying books then.
never found out what the problem was/is.
but i certainly don't put the kindle online and let amazon upgrade the firmware in the background.
I've got a 2019 Kidle Oasis, I dont know if it has epub support but I use a piece of software called Calibre which can convert epubs to mobi which I think is Amazon's proprietary format. Haven't done it for a while now but I think there's a problem with book covers now? Not too sure.
I've had a Kindle for years - to be fair to Amazon kindles seem to be built to last - and used to do the same.
But last time I did I got an email saying they're abandoning the mobi format and from now on when emailing documents to your Amazon library send it in epub format. Which is excellent news
I have the same interogation atm. Also, as a datageek I'd like a model which can keep/extract reading logs. Haven't found the perfect one, but I save your post just in case :)