But since it's also much easier to build upon it, it may become more buggy if you don't take care of what you are doing. I find Kobo's UI much better thought all around, more logicial, designed with reading in mind and not for trying to sell you stuff. No ghosting and visible previous pages on screen. Mostly interested from technical perspective, I like on kindle it have a better processor and its UI is less laggy, more fluid. I had firmly embraced Kobo as my best choice for format flexibility and for the crisper screen which is important to me, but the hardware unreliability has me wanting an ereader that just works without tinkering and troubleshooting so I’m thinking of limping back to the PW5. user experience within an actual ebook is fine and I prefer the fonts and layouts to Kindle - user experience in the menus, store etc are sluggish though. Still slightly too large to want to take with you, battery life has been all over the map and changes week to week for me - this week it rapidly drained and I had to update it and sign out, etc. Like the comfortable form factor but don’t really use the buttons (they’re loud and mushy) screen contrast is much better because it has a recessed screen, better warm lighting, access to libraries (Canada) is helpful if you don’t mind waiting. I read a lot on this but didn’t like being committed to buying all my books from Amazon and libraries in Canada don’t support Kindle. ![]() ![]() Integration with good reads is nice, easy to use the store to find titles. ![]() Good build quality, snappy interface, responsive with great battery life.
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