Older Nook e-readers will not be able to buy ebooks anymore

15 November 2023 (Good E-Reader)

Barnes and Noble have announced that they are suspending the service of older Nook e-readers. Barnes and Noble want people to upgrade to newer Nook e-readers.

If you have an ebook reader but struggle with finding light to read, get frustrated with slow page turns or low resolution, or merely hate how big your current device is, upgrading to a new one might be worthwhile.


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The cheapest Amazon Kindle is also the best e-reader for most people. Its affordable price, portability, upgraded display, 16 GB of base storage, and USB-C charging compatibility check the most-important boxes, plus Amazon offers a massive ebook catalog that frequently offers better prices than the competition. Checking out ebooks from the library via the Libby app on a phone or tablet and then having them delivered to your Kindle is also fairly intuitive.

This Kobo reader offers Kindle Paperwhite features for a Paperwhite price. The Kobo Clara 2E costs about the same as the Kindle Paperwhite, and while it feels a bit more like the regular Kindle in terms of materials and design, you get the same IPX8 waterproofing, adjustable screen brightness and color temperature, USB-C charging, and a 300 ppi E Ink screen for crisp, clear text.

with hundreds of ebooks already available it would be very hard to do that. i was looking for a third-party to host the files and display them with in the webview. btw you have done an incredible work, the app is fantastic. Congrats

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Amazon's Kindles are the best e-readers around. It's dead simple to get new ebooks from Amazon directly, and the Overdrive integration makes it easy to check out books from a local library instantly. E Ink screens in most ebook readers are a little slow when you interact with them, but Kindles are some of the most responsive devices on the market. It's worth noting that Kindles almost always see steep discounts a few times a year, particularly on Amazon Prime Day and Black Friday, so try to wait for a sale.

Don't want to give your hard-earned money to Amazon? A Kobo is your next-best option. The company (owned by Japanese retailer Rakuten) currently has six e-readers for you to choose from, all of which sit somewhere between $110 and $400.

Barnes & Noble Glowlight 4 for $150: This ebook reader has 32 gigs of storage, which is a good deal more than the Glowlight 4E (8 GB), and it has a night mode for more comfortable reading.

Ebooks can be cheap, but the cost can add up if you're rapidly flying through the digital pages. You should take advantage of your library card and check out ebooks instantly from the comfort of your home. We have a detailed guide that explains how to get free library books, but most library branches use OverDrive, making it quite simple. These ebooks are automatically removed from your device and returned to the library when they're due.

There are a few Kindle-specific ways to get free ebooks too, if that's the device you end up with. You can subscribe to Kindle Unlimited for $10 a month, which includes millions of titles, including audiobooks and magazines. Amazon's Prime Reading also offers a handful of free books every month, which is good to know if you already have a Prime account. You can even lend books to friends and family for a short while (or have them share a book with you).

@EmbyEbookReaderAs @GrimReapernoted an Ebook reader is underway. I have already written and tested the code in JavaScript and need to transfer it to the @Cheesegeezerplugin that he created for Javascript programmers. Now you know that many people are working on this, but we all have other duties. If you are a programmer, I would be more than happy to send you the javascript code. I use it to read Ebooks in Emby via my Emby Tool. You can do the same. The tool is attached below. Just unzip it and click on tool2.html. Signon to your server, then navigate to your ebooks and click on an e-book to read.

Ok I will take a look at this. I was not aware that Emby was an open source project where individual contributors could create new source code for their own readers, this is a total shocking surprise . Thank you!

so, I tried it out. and I see what you have done here... it's interesting and clever. But I'm not sure if this will meet my requirements for an all-in-one solution. Namely, to have CBR / CBZ handled by the same native client application & user interface as everything else. Are there any plans to merge this ebook reader back into the main core codebase within Emby client?

Kavita handles metadata quite well for epub and cbz (and I think cbr too but haven't tested it). So you can update your ebook files in Calibre, save to a Kavita-specific directory structure (the devs say this isn't necessary, but in my experience it is). Then it's a great interface for browsing, downloading, and reading remotely. If you only have epub and cbr/cbz I'd highly recommend it, particularly if you have more comics, since the data model is designed first and foremost for comics and extended to other ebooks.

The other options I've looked at are ubooquiti (sp?) which is no longer supported and had limited functionality, another tool in beta that I forget the name that has *very* limited functionality, and the spin-off of emby that I'm not sure if we're meant to mention here that is pretty much the same as emby for ebooks.

Yea. I guess my preference would be to just get at least BASIC comic book, ebook, and PDF reader functionality up and running: browsing and opening the files within Emby Client, showing Cover thumbnails, allowing page flipping, etc. Maybe pinch to zoom in on IPad client. Thereby allowing the user to actually READ the document / file. Nothing fancy. And then with subsequent releases, gradually introduce the more advanced features with Metadata and Search and Filtering, connecting to online databases to identify and match your media library. 


Imagine for a moment, watching your Marvel Cinematic Universe Movie collection, or DC if you prefer Superman / Batman, and on the same page as the film, below the Actors and Actresses pictures, are links to the original comic book series from which the film is based, you click on the preview image and it just instantly opens right up within Emby. So Superman movie from 1980 or whenever would have a picture of Action Comics from 1939 Or whenever. That my friends would be something fun, exciting, enjoyable, and remarkable! 


but I feel that the only way to get there would be if Emby developer team prioritizes making this ebook reader feature a higher priority than other things on their To-Do list.

I know there's Calibre, which goes way beyond being just an eBook reader, and theres FBReader, Which doesn't really work as of yet. Given that eBooks have been around for several years now, I'd assume, more software would've sprung up by now.

I recently came across a decent eBook reader for GNOME (or any desktop environment based on GTK) called Foliate. It relatively new, and currently under active development, yet it has a lot of interesting features:

However, based on my experience with the Kindle app on an Android phone, and other factors, I don't want to use a Kindle or Kindle app as my primary means for reading ebooks. I give Amazon enough information about myself when I shop. Using a product that they own and that has the potential to know everything that I read is just too much.

After trying out the ereader options available on the Playdate so far, I found that they were making me nauseous due to their low framerate and inconsistent stuttering. I decided to make PlayBook to try my hand at fixing this problem, and man I did not know what I was getting myself into. Many weeks and a ton of whiteboard algorithm-ing later and I can finally present PlayBook, an extremely performant and very flexible ebook reader for the Playdate!

When thinking about ebooks, there are a number of key business drivers to have in mind. Are you concerned with selling collections of ebooks to institutions? Are you looking to provide a mechanism for individual sale of ebooks to your customers directly through an app? Do you have any special needs around your content? For example, here at the American Mathematical Society, authors create in LaTeX. We want ePub3, which means we can use MathML. We would love to deploy MathJax, but we also need to provide high quality MathML, and are in fact close to solving this puzzle. Where are ebook readers on rendering MathML? What about good old PDFs? How do you sell your ebooks? What kind of ecommerce do you need? Are you concerned about applying DRM, or not?

This is a reader from Impelsys, Inc. iPublish Central is flexible in terms how you can organize content as a publisher, with collections for institutions in one portal with COUNTER 4 compliance and a suite of analytics tools, and sales to individuals via an app across devices. They have proprietary DRM if required, and synchronization across devices available when online. They are forward thinking, and while not yet handling complex math, are investigating possible avenues toward math rendering. For an academic publisher looking to manage both institutional and individual sales from a central approach, iPublishCentral looks like an intriguing option.

My Mother considers herself a serious reader. She reads on her iPad and has never in her life removed the DRM from anything. I would suspect that the total percentage of eBook readers who remove DRM and manage everything via Calibre adds up to single digits, maybe a single digit at best of the overall population. 0852c4b9a8

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