I have been using ereaders since ‘08. However, in 2017 I bought a Kindle Oasis. It was everything I wanted in an ereader. It was small and light enough to hold comfortably in one hand. It had a warm front light so I didn’t need to sit directly under a lamp to see what I was reading. It worked with Calibre without a hitch. Most importantly, it had BUTTONS. I hate touching a screen when I am reading. Mainly because I half the time I am eating and my fingers might be greasy, etc. Thus, for the last 7 ½ years I have enjoyed ereading bliss. Sadly, the battery is beginning to wear out on the Oasis (it has the bulk of the battery in the cover) and I have to charge it twice a week now (when I first bought it, it would last from 7-10 days on a charge). It has also begun to show signs of software degradation as well as hardware degradation (screen might take a double tap to select something, or a button will have to be pressed several times to get it to respond). I realized it was time to get a new ereader.
The
landscape has changed dramatically since ‘17 though. Amazon no
longer makes an ereader with buttons. They have also begun seriously
locking down their kindle devices in much the same way that Apple has
screwed their Iwhatever users over. So a new kindle wasn’t an
option this time around. In fact, most ereader makers had stopped
making devices with buttons. I ended up going with the Pocketbook
Era, a device from ‘22 that still had buttons.
I
knew there would be a learning curve and I had hoped that any issues
would all fall into that category. One positive thing from the
get-go was that I didn’t need to register the device or create an
account at Pocketbook to use the Era, unlike any kindle device. I
created my various collections (series or authors) and then began
moving books onto the device from Calibre. I only moved a couple at
first, as I didn’t know how things would go and I am glad I started
small.
My
first, and probably biggest, issue with the Era was that I couldn’t
go into a collection and then add multiple books to it. Everything on
the Era is built around books as individual files and how everything
is handled is based on that. That meant that I had to select each
individual book and move it into the collection I wanted. That is
totally bassackwards! It was also incredibly frustating as I had to
do this for all 80’ish books. There is a plugin for Calibre called
Pocketbook Collections that was created to take care of this problem,
but most plugins are created by people who live this kind of stuff
and so what seems easy, commonsense and “duh” to the creators are
like calculus problems for the rest of us, while blindfolded. I gave
it 10min of my time and then gave up. I was already frustrated and
trying to do something “more” while frustrated would just lead to
more frustrations. So I moved each individual book into its proper
collection, one by *&^% one. I will not do that again. Which
means I will have to conquer the plugin. I’ve conquered other
Calibre plugins, so I know I can conquer this one too. The slight
hitch is that I have recently quit Mobileread.com (where the Calibre
and plugin help forums are) because I told someone from Massachusetts
to step in front of a bus. That’s not acceptable behavior and so I
closed down my account so there wouldn’t be any repeats of it. I
can’t act like that and I won’t accept it in myself. But that
means its up to me and my pal Google (the lying piece of trash) to
figure this thing out. I will, albeit very slowly. But I work best in
first gear anyway. It’s just annoying when you know you could be
going 60mph.
So
everything was loaded up and I got the light settings how I wanted,
the text size and spacing just how I wanted and the margins how I
wanted. I was good to go! Then I experienced the second issue.
The
bleeping buttons, of all things. They were not the softpress buttons
like all of the kindles I have used to date, but were much more
“haptic” (a hard press until it literally “clicks”) like the
Barnes and Noble Simple Touch of years gone by. The reason that is a
problem is that kind of hard pressing does a number on your thumb
after a while. Considering that I will read for hours at a time,
necessitating a LOT of button pushing, I could tell my thumb would
end up hurting after an hour or so. Now, the Era also has a touch
enabled screen so I could touch the screen, but I don’t like being
forced that way.
That’s
it, my only problems. Both are surmountable and something I’ll get
use to. But for anyone thinking about the Era, they need to be aware
of those issues.
The biggest thing I like about this Era is that it is bigger than my Oasis. That means I can use the same font size and have more words on the page to read. And the Era actually weighs a little less. More words on the page means more reading between page turns, which adds up to more time reading overall. While it might only mean an extra minute or two per book, given the number of books I read per year means an extra book or two per year. That’s not a lot and for some people it would mean nothing but that they are worrying about numbers. But I LIKE to read and getting the opportunity to read even one extra book a year is a wonderful thing.
As
I begin to use the Era on a full time basis, I’m sure I’ll
stumble over other negatives and positives. But this is my reader now
and I’ll simply have to accept those for the quirks they are.
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