![]() The Kindle comes in the new Amazon hassle-free packaging. After starting up the reader and filling in some information in order to create a Kobo account, the first book you’ll read serves as a great introduction to how you use the device. Everything you really need is in the box, including the USB cable you use to charge the device. The Kobo Touch comes in standard packaging, a thin cardboard box with a tray containing the Kobo. Textual input is much easier on a touch device, as the on-screen touch keyboard is what you would expect from a mobile phone (just slower) but as with all touch-screen devices, the more you put your greasy paws on the screen, the worse the reading experience is. Suffice to say, you pay around 25% extra to get the touch capability on either device, although this feature in itself has pros and cons. I would have loved to compare the Kindle Touch to the Kobo Touch, but the Kindle Touch edition isn’t currently available in the UK. I have read multiple book on each device, so this very much a hands-on Kobo vs Kindle comparison not a paper exercise. I’m going to compare just about everything from start to finish, so feel free to skip past the bits you aren’t very interested in in order to get to the comparisons that matter to you. I have done exactly that and pitched a Kobo Touch against a new Kindle in order to see if there is anything notable to pick out against these two lightweight e-book reading devices. PDF, EPUB, FB2, RTF, MOBI, TXT, HTML/HTM, DJVU/DJV, JPG, PNG, etc.On paper, there isn’t much to separate Kobo from Kindle, so the only real way to tell the difference is to get your hands on the real thing and see how they perform. Kindle Paperwhite (3rd generation) Wi-Fi/3GĨ GB (6 GB available for user) + 25GB tolino cloud
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