Hi,

My Kindle won’t boot anymore and keeps getting stuck in boot screen, so I thought this might be a good time to get away from Amazon, even though that device was great.

So, what non-kindle readers would you recommend?

It should have color and background light and it shouldn’t be huge so I can keep it in the back pocket.

And, since I don’t have any experience outside the Amazon ecosystem: how is the experience of buying and transferring books to non Kindle readers?

Update: I did research based on your recommendations. Thanks for all the input, that was way more than I expected! I settled for the Kobo Clara Color since it seemed to almost perfectly match my needs and Kobo and the model itself got heavily recommended here and on the web.

  • Riley@lemmy.ml
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    6 days ago

    The Kobo is great. Very moddable, you can set it up in sideload mode so you never even need to register for an account, just move files to it via USB.

  • Arkhive (they/she)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    6 days ago

    I have a boox for bigger screen reading and a Hisense touch for on the go. I like them both. Wish I could more easily tweak the boox, and wish I could more easily ditch all the vendor crapware off the Hisense, but they do their jobs well enough. Hisense gets bonus points for being a hi-fi device that can drive my IEMs.

  • Hanrahan@slrpnk.net
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    6 days ago

    Im running a Kobo Libra Colour before that an old model Kindle that crapped itself.

    Lots to like

    Things I don’t like

    • No charging LED so you know when it’s fully charged
    • My books are sidleloaded from Calibre and 70% of the time when i go to start reading a book that I’m part way through, it opens on a different page , often 20-40 pages away, so much confusion. Not sure if it also does this to books sourced from the Kobo bookstore, or its a Calibre thing
    • Used to piss me off the power button being on the back, flip the cover over to read, it covers the power button. Put the Libra down, come back to it, the kobo cover covered the power switch, DOH! . They have since allowed a work around in the firmware where you can press the page turn button to restart reading, so it’s no longer really an issue.
  • Akuchimoya@startrek.website
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    7 days ago

    You might possibly be interested in checking out the YouTube channel MyDeepGuide. Guy does in-depth reviews ofbmostly e-ink writing tablets, which perhaps is more functionality than you’re looking for, but some of those manufacturers also do standalone “just” readers. Or maybe you’ll be convinced to get a writing tablet :p

  • JamieCristofani@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    If you are looking at the onyx boox leaf range, I think a new one is being announced in the next week or so… May be worth holding out if you can.

  • jamie_oliver@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Onyx Boox are the best imo. I am not sure exactlyabout which the latest model is, mine is a few years old.

    Android, has a web browser, file transfer over network. Getting books is very easy and you can even put a library app on there, or any store that is on an app store. But also of course just download from the browser is fine. You should be able to strip drm from current purchases with calibre and then just use the network file transfer and get them on there, for example. There is support for any mayor format, epub, mobi, pdf, cbz…

    Battery lasts very long time. Has backlight. Newer models have color but I have not tried those myself.

    The reader is awesome and has built in dictionary and translation for individual words. Some basic reading tracking statistics as well. You can of course install any other reader you want from app store or apk.

    • tantalizer@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      I don’t agree with this. Boox devices are notorious for not getting updates. As they are running on Android, security updates are crucial. But they keep churning out so many devices per year that they usually don’t bother to keep existing ones up to date.

      In general, I wouldn’t recommend an Android device for reading books. They are usually heavier than regular readers like Kobos for example. They also have atrocious battery life. Compared to a regular tablet it might be fine but compared to a dedicated ereader it’s usually crap.

      Their UI is also not as intuitive and needs some getting used to. But I guess that’s subjective.

      I think for only reading there is no need to get a full fledged Android device.

      Lastly, there is also the fact that it’s a Chinese company. People can make of that what they want. Kobo is Canadian, although the parent company, Rakuten, is Japanese.

      • jamie_oliver@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Battery for a week is pretty good to me. The UI is fine, but as you say that is personal preference. I agree that it is worth mentioning that it is chinese. It is not heavy at all, it is very light.

        Android is useful if you don’t want to be tied to a specific store, for being able to read documentation and articles as well as easily getting new books. It is not meant to be used for web browsing or any serious app use, but I disagree that having Android is pointless, as it allows for alternate readers (like Mihon) and getting books from the web.

        • tantalizer@lemmy.world
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          7 days ago

          True, having Android on it definitely has advantages. You can read RSS feeds easier, use established note taking tools etc. But it comes with its own set of downsides. It’s definitely not pointless!

          Regarding battery, sure a week is nice when compared to an iPad or Android tablet. But a dedicated reader running for a month is hard to beat :)

          I just looked up the weight of the Boox Note Airs C and it’s actually lighter than I remembered. 410g compared to Elipsa 2E at 390g. That’s pretty nice.

    • ikidd@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      This but a 7" tablet. And man, if I could find a current one that ran an older version of android that didn’t have a screen lock enforced, I’d buy 10 of them. I hate waking up in the middle of the night and having the full brightness of the lockscreen in my eyes until I can swipe and get my max-dimmed FBReader screen. Never had that problem on Android 4.X

  • myrmidex@slrpnk.net
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    7 days ago

    I have an older kobo, the h20 Libra, some years old. I have my eye on a new version but I don’t replace things that aren’t broke. Let me tell you, that Libra will last me years to come still, amazing quality. I haven’t even mentioned the easy USB connect to add books, or the great Kobo store.

    My next one will definitely be a Kobo as well.

    • Niquarl@lemmy.ml
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      7 days ago

      I have a kobo from 2016 that still works alright. I kind of want to buy a newer model but it’s not broken yet so…

      • myrmidex@slrpnk.net
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        6 days ago

        Terrible, such sturdiness. I’m starting to fear this will be my last e-reader ever… :)

  • Timmy Mac@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    I got a Boox about a year ago and am very happy with it. In addition to the built in reader, I have the Kindle, B&N, Kobo and Google Play books apps on it. I only buy epubs without DRM these days, and I’ve de-DRMed all my purchases from all these platforms and backed them up, but if there’s something I want to re-read, I find it’s easier to use the apps.

    I could put other apps on it, since it’s essentially an Android device, but I keep it strictly for reading.

  • kat_angstrom@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Kobo Libra 2 checking in. The ability to directly load epub files (and other formats) directly onto the drive and bypass the store is a game changer.

    • OmegaMouse@pawb.social
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      7 days ago

      I also have a Libra 2 and it’s great! Nice size screen and very lightweight. Just to note as the OP asked for colour, the Libra 2 is B&W but they now do Libra and Clara colour versions :)

    • calm.like.a.bomb@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 days ago

      Not defending Amazon, but you can do this with Kindle too. I’ve had my kindles in airplane mode since I bought them (for me and my wife) and I’m adding books directly with Calibre anytime I want. You don’t need their whole “ecosystem”.

  • DonutsRMeh@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Kobo is the way. Open system. Not locked like kindle. You can “jailbreak” it in 5 seconds. Linux based. They send you firmware updates even when it’s “jailbroken”. You can bring your own books and they won’t fuck with your book covers like kindle does (I would use calibre to convert your books to kepub to get all the features on a book). No ads on the lock screen. I love my kobo Sage. I’m waiting for them to release a 10" one with high PPI so I can buy it. In all honesty, even the android ones are better than kindle. Basically, almost all non-kindles are good, except for a few random Chinese brands that have their own weird OS.

  • Deebster@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    I’ve researched this and I’ll be buying a Kobo once my Kindle finally dies (it’s lived a hard life). I’ve bought DRMed books from some non-Amazon sources and had to go through the steps to strip their DRM so I could read them on the Kindle - this was using Calibre. Mostly those other sources were using Adobe Digital Editions (DeDRM can handle it).

    I have yet to find if there’s a self-hosted option that would replicate what Amazon does - i.e. tracks read position and lets you download and read via an Android app or a website. I do have Calibre-web set up, but haven’t fully looked into what it can do yet.

    • DonutsRMeh@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Look into koreader. They host for you without an account. All you need is a username. You can read the same book and track your progress on different devices through koreader. If that’s what you mean

  • Strider@thelemmy.club
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    7 days ago

    To play devil’s advocate, is there any way you might be able to fix the Kindle? I’ve saved two for family members by swapping batteries and it’s not that hard if you have a spudger and decent set of screwdrivers.