i’ve read a lot of books on my iPad Mini (2nd generation from 2014). i also have a Kindle Paperwhite purchased two years ago which gets much use. With aging eyes i find the 8 inch colour screen of the iPad easier to see key elements within cover art of books in my Kindle Library. Then i can readily select the next book I wish to load onto the Paperwhite. The iPad Mini is also better for creating and editing notes and re-positioning the cursor precisely within them than the Kindle. Often i prefer the capability to continuously scroll down or up vertically through a book than swiping right or left to the desired page..This especially when the Kindle ereader fails to synchronize to the correct line on the next page. I’m fortunate to have both devices, thus enhancing my reading pleasure.
I’ve been using it since the first release of the kindle app, every day, for several hours a day. Never experienced eye strain or discomfort. Pages display perfectly in full colour, pages turn smoothly in milliseconds with no flickering refresh. I honestly don’t know why anyone ever uses a kindle device. I tried my wife’s and it’s absolutely awful.
My relationship with my iPad dates back to my active duty, sea-going days in the Navy. I had too many books that took up my space. I’d often lend these books out to have them returned in an inappropriate condition, even ones I hadn’t read yet. So I decided to invest in a kindle. Back then (2013) the first backlight kindle had launched and they were priced the same as a fully functional tablet of the same size. I opted for a Samsung tab with kindle capability and loved it. Time passed and I became dissatisfied with the android operating system because they were laggy and crashed. I switched to Apple and had every iPad mini since the 3rd generation one. I had access to unlimited books I could purchase and read offline. I also loved that the iPad mini fit amazingly in my cargo pocket of my military uniform. It was only recently in 2022 that I traded my iPad mini 6 for an iPad 9th generation for GoodNotes to use for college. Fast forward to now and I type this comment on my beloved iPad Air 5, as I gifted my iPad 9th gen to my stepdaughter. It’s a very versatile device and I love that I can use it for many things.
I read a lot. I have a kindle and an iPad. I almost always use the iPad and the Kindle app because it is much faster to respond, I can add notes easier, the app is intuitive and my iPad is usually on. I tend to take the kindle on holidays where I may not have access to a charging point and there’s a higher risk of theft. One improvement I'd like to see is the ability to have several books open at once.
I've used the Kindle App on my iPad a few times and the experience wasn't bad, but, the Deal Breaker for me was battery life, and the Real Kindle wins hands down.
Took my iPad mini 6 on holiday. Spent around 5-6 hours reading per day. Got paper like on it. I used my iPhone for listening to audiobooks from audible for probably 1-2 hours a day. But even when I had used my iPad mini for most of the day, it still had 15-20% power left. That included reading and looking at some RUclips channels for news and sport, and even the odd film. Charging it up whilst having lunch I use a solar charger that was about the size of an iPhone but twice as thick increased the remaining charge by 10-15%. Then I popped it on charge at night. I would not have use the kindle longer during the day and apart from a bit of contrast issue during direct sunlight, it was far better and more flexible. Kindle is great if you don’t need the functionality of a computer. Otherwise the iPad mini is probably the best tablet for most users who don’t need a computer replacement.
I have an Ipad pro, given for Xmas 2 years ago, and have just bought the Kindle Scribe..........they both have their places and I keep each for it's significant use separately......then I bought the Kindle 6" model with the baby elephant in green cover.......reading on the go is now as easy as pulling it out of my jacket pocket.
I spent a looong time deciding on what I wanted in a reader and knew that color was top of my list - and not the faded color some readers have right now. I’m in love with the look and feel of my iPad mini 6 and already thinking about how I can annotate and export content from my readings. Thanks for presenting in a nice clear manner. I found it helpful!
One more tip - in the ipad settings, go to accessibility and turn on color filters and move the slider to make it all red. You can set up the triple click to make it easier to turn on/off. Now when you read at night, turn this filter on and the text will be red instead of white resulting in even less light hitting you in the eyes and its much less bright for those around you.
I’m done with Kindle’s…my iPad mini markup feature is so nice to have. Love the ability to have Google to deep dive into topics while I’m reading. Battery sucks that’s true, a non issue for me because I’m never reading for 8 hours continuously. 😂
I have a kindle paperwhite and just got an I pad for reading my textbooks and taking notes! I can’t wait to read kindle books on my I pad when I want color!! Especially for reading fantasy books with maps it’s great to see it in color.
I’m a bit confused. On my kindles I have either the “text to speech“ or the “reading assistant” function for audio. Additionally I can add the complementary audio book (listening on the Kindle or my phone). For me, the iPad “text to speech” function is clunky.
It amazes me how people still use white screens on their devices. Even with the lowest light, night shift and reduce white point, white light can be so painful to the eyes. Some apps/websites do not allow dark modes, and I am so tired of asking for it. Dark mode doesn't only save you from going almost blind, but I heard it is also great to save battery. Thanks for the video! :)
For working people, I can't imagine using anything other than an iPad. Its rare I have the time to fully isolate into reading a book for long periods of time; I'm always getting some type of notification whether it be for my business or personal. The ability to pause my reading and switch right there to what I need to look at (or do) is wonderful. And I can do it on the same device! Once, I'm done (which isn't hopefully too long), I can go back to where I left off in the book. Great video. Hopefully you enlightened a few folks on the benefits of using the iPad as an e-reader.
Recently, I bought Janson's History of Art for Kindle on my iPad. The color illustrations are shockingly good... better than the print book I had years ago in college. And they are hi-res... so they can be enlarged to see details without breaking up. Amazing! Also got a huge book about the wine business. 2500 pages. You can imagine how heavy and awkward either of these books would be in print!
Good information. Reading e-books is actually the reason I got my first iPad. I’m always surprised how people buy an iPad and never bother to learn how to use it to its max. Why spend that kind of money without learning everything it can do?
If you can deal with the horrible unresponsiveness of kindle screen for highlighting , then it’s a great tool. Otherwise go for the iPad and Apple Pencil.
For my old and sensitive eyes, iPad Pro is the easiest. Less eye strains than Kindles for me. I believe the newer kindles are better, but old kindles were like reading softly printed fonts on gray newspaper like texture. My eyes had to try harder to read.
Stop lying. Reading on an IPad is nothing like the experience of reading a book. The harsh light on an IPad is bad for your eyes. A Kindle is designed with e-ink to be easy on your eyes. At night you can use its yellow light which is very easy on the eyes. The color of the text and the lighted page is just like a book.
@@JesusSavesSinners Well…of course using ANY device to read a book will never be the exact same as picking up an actual book, but there is no doubt e-readers/ipads is really convenient in many ways. For example: it saves space, you have more than just 1 or 2 books to read/carry all on 1 device and it helps me stay focused (again, for ME). I never had a kindle scribe but since I have an iPad, I’D say it is just as good as a regular book if not better. You can adjust the brightness to your liking on both the iPad & in the kindle app so that’s not even an issue. Besides, you can still strain your eyes reading a regular book book small text anyway. I also understand why people would prefer a physical book, but since I have a lot of books already and is tight for space, reading on my iPad is a much better choice/option. Sometimes I use my phone if I don’t want to carry an 11in iPad everywhere I go. So no, it’s not “a lie” or terrible choice to use an iPad to read. At least you can see the covers of the books in color rather than plain black and white.🤷🏼♀️
Ignorant. That doesn't do anything. The temptation to use all the features of the IPad is still right there. An IPad is not a good reading experience. It is much heavier to hold. The light on the IPad is hard on your eyes. People who use a Kindle understand why a Kindle is far superior to any other device for reading books.
@@wondawomenluvsupaman I have several different iPads. Anytime I want to read with them I either use a stand or I use another method to hold it up. iPads are too heavy to hold and read with like a book or a Kindle e-reader. The books I will read with the ipad are picture books like Ken Burns the Civil War. I have a lot of books like that. I can read all day and have with a Kindle e-reader, I have 8+ Kindle e-readers. I own every new model except for the Scribe I have No use for that one right now. After an hour my eyes hurt reading on an iPad. The iPad or any other tablet computer is Good for Books with pictures but if you are an avid Book reader always use the Kindle the reading experience cannot be topped. The Kindle's least expensive model now has a built in light making it an outstanding device. I bought mine for Less than $50.00 Brand New ew. I paid $150 for the most recent Kindle Oasis I bought the newest Model Brand New. People like to complain about the price for a New Kindle e-reader but I have Never paid full price for a New Kindle. Several times a Year they go on sale for huge discounts. My Kindle Oasis was more than 60% off. You can try and pretend that an iPad is a good device for reading on but it is Not. This video is laughable...
These are precisely the steps I have been using for reading on my surface go. I believe that this actually tops the Kindle Oasis because. I can and usually do turn it to read in landscape mode and the Kindle app breaks it into a left and right page. The Oasis does not do that. So yeah, 10 inch tablet plus matte screen protector plus blue light filter. Makes it a pretty good experience to me. In addition with the app you can do text-to-speech while you're reading. You can't do that with an actual Kindle. My Surface Go has a great pen that I can use with Onenote or with the Kindle app...but to me even better is the magnetically attachable keyboard, which lets me make notes faster.
Fantastic and very useful content! I love my Kindle but hated trying to read on the iPad. Trying some of these now and it is improving the experience tremendously!
Clear instructions are good and useful in this video. Comments so far conflate: Using iPad for reading, if so, then maximizing comfort on eyes using settings and possibly screen protector. This is not a kindle replacement but it is maximizing utility of an iPad for reading and note taking. Thank you for the useful tips. Other commentators: Try to understand the intention and if commentating add value by describing the difference in comfort on the eyes for using the iPad "Before vs After" + "vs the kindle" in some sort of useful way eg minutes of reading before discomfort sets in.
1) Shoving your iPad under the pillow or dropping it by the bed is not a good idea. Kindle can live with it. 2) Reading in a bath - won't risk an iPad. 3) iPad can hardly fit in a backpack, while Kindle feels ok in a coat pocket or a handbag. 4) Reading an iPad in a packed subway - crazy idea. Yet making notes while reading is cool.
great tips! Although I'm a big fan of matte screen protectors (I have them on all of my touchscreen devices), I agree with your assessment regarding the downsides. The deficiencies are more noticeable on my iPads that have laminated screens, but on my iPad 9th gen (non-laminated) the matte protector seems to reduce the visual affect of the air gap. That was a nice accidental benefit.
Its a totally different thing. I don't like reading ebooks on my iPad or phone as the light is horrible for reading, also as other people mention there is no distraction on the ereader also I love to mark and create notes and have them in one place.
Yes, dark modes and such help. But at the end of the day, you're still reading on an LCD/OLED panel. And it won't ever be as enjoyable as a Kindle for a serious reader. You can optimize it to make it less bad. But it's still no E-Ink for longer reading. The only benefit of an iPad or Amazon Fire tablet is that since they are colored displays, they tend to be a bit better for reading comics on. This is because the color is used quite a bit for expression in comics. Plus since they use word bubbles, the larger displays allow you to see the text in those small bubbles easier. But for any regular book the Kindle all day. Comics the tablet is probably best in my opinion. That's why I just purchased the new "Amazon Fire HD 10 Plus" tablet. Plus since it's made by Amazon the Kindle app will likely offer the best and most optimized experience on a Fire tablet. I have the "Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition" as well. Plus I ordered the all-new Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra with the S-Pen for Kindle on the go too. (For short-term reading on breaks at work and such.) 🙂
Yeah I completely agree, as someone who owns kindles, if I have one to hand I will always grab it over the iPad for the reasons you’ve said. But if I didn’t have one or had gone somewhere with my iPad instead and no kindle I would definitely still use it and with some changes to the set up it’s much more enjoyable than otherwise. I’d be interested to hear your thought on using the Samsung. I have an iPhone 14 pro as my device and carry a 14 plus for my work and never use either for reading. Maybe I should.
Goodness, you are where many of us were back in 2015. The best device for the Kindle App is the Microsoft Surface Duo phones surg side by side pages. 2 pages side by side, pages turn like a real book, and super lightweight. The issue with the brightness remains.
I’m sure the Duo can provide a good experience but the aim of the video was to help people get more out of tech they already own rather need to buy more.
@@samuelbuckingham Sure, understood that. I've spent 7 years trying to address this problem across IPads, Android, Windows devices and now Eink tablets. So far the best ones are the Andoid based Surface Duo and the Kindle Scribe.
I think the default iBooks screen is white becase traditional paper books are white, and this is part of the skewmorphic design, with the animated page transitions, etc.
great tips, been doing all of these for years since my old ipad2 pretty much just works as an ebook reader nowadays lol and it performs flawlessly at that.
Perfect! Just what I needed because shelling out more cash for another device just seems ridiculous and I would rather remain within the Apple ecosystem.
Well, i don't have an Ipad but a Samsung Tab S6 and i tried to read a book on it. It's not very comfortable because of its weight. A tablet can not replace a Kindle.
I’ve just bought a Scribe after using my iPad to read Kindle books for the last couple of years. I prefer to scroll as I read rather than tap to turn the pages but I can’t see a way to do this on my new scribe, can you tell me if this is possible please, and if so how? Thank you.
I wouldn't get a kindle scribe but I do have a paperwhite. The paperwhite is great for just reading. Using my ipad or phone for reading is just too distracting and exhausting for my eyes.
Does anyone has the issue of Android Kindle reading app refuses to reduce brightness level? Even when I reduce brightness in the main menu of my tablet (Xiaomi Redmi Pad 2022) the Kindle app doesn't respond to it and stays too bright (even when on minimum brightness level). During the day that's not a big issue but in the night it's really painfull to read.
Most of us read all day on our devices and I prefer the iPad to read, it's faster and crisper. quite easy to change the contrasts and brightness. The only thing I wouldn't do with my iPad is use that utterly hopeless apple pencil.
you do realize stuff is tailored from the very conception to do one thing, and as such, using stuff for the thing it was built will give you the best bang for your buck, regardless of what it is. dont shocked by that.. of course you ca utilize things for the stuff they were not built for, and i have some funny scenarios in my mind right now
Kindle are over priced slow pieces of junk that don’t last long. Waste of money. For every pro I can find a con. I use my kindle fire to read on. Way faster, cheaper, I can turn brightness down, use the blue light dimming, I have a screen protector that’s great for reading. I don’t get why people swear by the kindle lol
i was also trying to simulate the kindle experience in my tablet, and i found "tracing paper" can give you that paper look if you put it on top of the screen, but idk if its a good idea.
That’s not a million miles off what the Matt screen protectors are the do have the look and feel of tracing paper so I bet the end result is very similar
Ipad battery is terrible even for reading wtf! Only reason i have a kindle. Kindle gives me a month of worry free battery. If you love reading you know you want half the day to yourself. The ipad doesnt give me that!
LOL. I laugh at BOTH of you in real book in my hand, which cannot be retroactively censored/modified or summarily ERASED, without you breaking into my room and finding where I hid it.
At my age I am finding my Kindle Paperwhite or old iPad mini is much less weighty and awkward than a large print hardcover book. Also, i read when awaking in the wee hours; at those times dark mode is invaluable for not disturbing my sleeping wife LOL 😉
Why you hating? Maybe people like reading on a iPad, why people have need to make every into opposites groups? People with books making fun of kindle users, kindle users of iPad users? We all read fucking books chill out
Kindle books you purchase are safe from being charged. All you have to do is to turn off automatic book 📖 updates. The ability to have my entire book library in my hands at the same time beats a paper book every day of the week. I also have thousands of 100% free Kindle books 📚. Not garbage books no one wants to read. Books that are offered free from current top authors. I have gotten all the classics for free too. I happen to love the classics. The cost of buy new best-selling novels is a lot less expensive than buying the paper version. Kindle daily, weekly and monthly deals deeply discount every top selling authors books. A $45.00 book 📖 will cost $3.00. The price to build a high quality library is incredibly cheap compared to what physical books cost.
Ignorant video!!!! You do not understand what a Kindle is!!! A Kindle is like reading a book 📖. It is very lightweight, the reading experience is just like an actual book. The cost of a Kindle is 10 time less than an IPad too. An IPad is very heavy compared to a Kindle. The reading experience is not nearly as good. Also an IPad includes a lot of distractions.
Maybe check out my video before this where I compare every model of kindle as I’ve been using them every day for about 15 years and love them. The point of this video isn’t if your thinking about buying a kindle, then buy an iPad instead. It’s if you already own an iPad can you get a decent reading experience from it and I believe with these tips you definitely can.
@@samuelbuckinghamAnyone who is an avid reader would never consider an iPhone an iPad, any phone or tablet a good device for reading. I have owned several different iPhones and 7 or so different iPads. I currently have and use 2 iPads. I tried using the Kindle app for years on phones and on tablets including the iPad. Trying to read on these gave me terrible headaches. Not to mention with the heavy tablets, including the iPad. It was very tiring to hold them for reading. I would prop them up on a pillow or try anything to be able to read without hurting my hands and getting my arms tired. So 8 years ago I decided I would try using a Kindle because I had already invested a lot of money in my Kindle library. I discovered that people who love using the Kindle e-ink reader were right. I talked to friends of mine who used them, looked at theirs before I bought mine. I right now own and use 6 different versions of the Kindle from the 1st 10 inch Kindle to my Kindle Oasis. I use them exactly like a Book. I enjoy reading several different books at a time. So I go from one Kindle with a book I am currently reading to another Kindle with another book 📚 I am currently reading. I know other people who do this too. They even have a Kindle with Mystery books only on it another with only Classic Books on it and so on. I would never tell someone that an iPad was a good device for reading books on. An iPad is a horrible device for reading books on. Anyone who can afford an iPad can afford to buy a Kindle. Any iPad user who is an avid reader will get headaches from using an iPad to read on, that is a scientific fact. People who read on iPads are not avid readers. For example there are people like yourself who make videos exactly like this one about the iPad. I have talked with them and got them to be honest. In truth these people do not enjoy reading. When they read they read a physical book. Yes they only read one book on an iPad to make their videos. I have talked with numerous different iPad readers as well. I discovered they really could not be called iPad book readers either because at best they would complete 3 books a year. Many people who are in the comment section on these videos are not readers. They are casual readers at best. They read less than 2 hours a week. What they do is read for 15 minutes before they go to bed.
@@samuelbuckingham This video is great. I have a lot of trouble reading on the Kindle device outside. I also like to switch between audible and the Kindle app and you need the ipad for that. The Kindle App does so much more than the Kindle device. Thanks for the tip on the screen cover. I'll give that a try. This is definitely not an old problem.
@@barbararosswriter I have never had any trouble reading my Kindle e-ink readers outside. Frankly it's pretty Stupid to try and use any type of screen in direct sunlight. It is Not a good thing to spend time outside in direct sunlight. You obviously are Not an Avid reader. Kindles and other e-ink readers are extremely popular among Avid readers because they absolutely cannot be beat. The e-ink technology is so good that the screen looks like an actual book, very easy on the eyes. Kindle e-ink readers are far Superior to an iPad because an iPad is very harsh light to try and read on for very long. iPads are very heavy for holding and trying to read on for a long time. Kindles have a very long battery life. iPads have very short battery life in comparison. A Kindle e-ink reader is something you can easily take anywhere, just put it in your pocket. If you happen to lose it you are not going to be losing the price of an iPad which is 10 times or more expensive. You can leave your Kindle on your desk at work and not fear someone will steal it. I have had 2 iPads stolen from me. People love to steal Apple products.
Have you ever read a book on your Ipad?
yes, many
yes
Yes, There is no eye strain or issues with reading on a tablet vs the ereader unless you are outside then the ereader wins
i’ve read a lot of books on my iPad Mini (2nd generation from 2014). i also have a Kindle Paperwhite purchased two years ago which gets much use. With aging eyes i find the 8 inch colour screen of the iPad easier to see key elements within cover art of books in my Kindle Library. Then i can readily select the next book I wish to load onto the Paperwhite.
The iPad Mini is also better for creating and editing notes and re-positioning the cursor precisely within them than the Kindle. Often i prefer the capability to continuously scroll down or up vertically through a book than swiping right or left to the desired page..This especially when the Kindle ereader fails to synchronize to the correct line on the next page. I’m fortunate to have both devices, thus enhancing my reading pleasure.
I’ve been using it since the first release of the kindle app, every day, for several hours a day. Never experienced eye strain or discomfort. Pages display perfectly in full colour, pages turn smoothly in milliseconds with no flickering refresh.
I honestly don’t know why anyone ever uses a kindle device. I tried my wife’s and it’s absolutely awful.
My relationship with my iPad dates back to my active duty, sea-going days in the Navy. I had too many books that took up my space. I’d often lend these books out to have them returned in an inappropriate condition, even ones I hadn’t read yet. So I decided to invest in a kindle. Back then (2013) the first backlight kindle had launched and they were priced the same as a fully functional tablet of the same size. I opted for a Samsung tab with kindle capability and loved it. Time passed and I became dissatisfied with the android operating system because they were laggy and crashed. I switched to Apple and had every iPad mini since the 3rd generation one. I had access to unlimited books I could purchase and read offline. I also loved that the iPad mini fit amazingly in my cargo pocket of my military uniform. It was only recently in 2022 that I traded my iPad mini 6 for an iPad 9th generation for GoodNotes to use for college. Fast forward to now and I type this comment on my beloved iPad Air 5, as I gifted my iPad 9th gen to my stepdaughter. It’s a very versatile device and I love that I can use it for many things.
I read a lot. I have a kindle and an iPad. I almost always use the iPad and the Kindle app because it is much faster to respond, I can add notes easier, the app is intuitive and my iPad is usually on. I tend to take the kindle on holidays where I may not have access to a charging point and there’s a higher risk of theft. One improvement I'd like to see is the ability to have several books open at once.
I've used the Kindle App on my iPad a few times and the experience wasn't bad, but, the Deal Breaker for me was battery life, and the Real Kindle wins hands down.
cz real kindle is dedicated towards reading only and doesn't demand any heavy processing in it. thus providing great battery backup..
Took my iPad mini 6 on holiday. Spent around 5-6 hours reading per day. Got paper like on it. I used my iPhone for listening to audiobooks from audible for probably 1-2 hours a day. But even when I had used my iPad mini for most of the day, it still had 15-20% power left. That included reading and looking at some RUclips channels for news and sport, and even the odd film. Charging it up whilst having lunch I use a solar charger that was about the size of an iPhone but twice as thick increased the remaining charge by 10-15%. Then I popped it on charge at night. I would not have use the kindle longer during the day and apart from a bit of contrast issue during direct sunlight, it was far better and more flexible. Kindle is great if you don’t need the functionality of a computer. Otherwise the iPad mini is probably the best tablet for most users who don’t need a computer replacement.
I have an Ipad pro, given for Xmas 2 years ago, and have just bought the Kindle Scribe..........they both have their places and I keep each for it's significant use separately......then I bought the Kindle 6" model with the baby elephant in green cover.......reading on the go is now as easy as pulling it out of my jacket pocket.
I spent a looong time deciding on what I wanted in a reader and knew that color was top of my list - and not the faded color some readers have right now. I’m in love with the look and feel of my iPad mini 6 and already thinking about how I can annotate and export content from my readings. Thanks for presenting in a nice clear manner. I found it helpful!
One more tip - in the ipad settings, go to accessibility and turn on color filters and move the slider to make it all red. You can set up the triple click to make it easier to turn on/off. Now when you read at night, turn this filter on and the text will be red instead of white resulting in even less light hitting you in the eyes and its much less bright for those around you.
Great tip
I’m done with Kindle’s…my iPad mini markup feature is so nice to have. Love the ability to have Google to deep dive into topics while I’m reading. Battery sucks that’s true, a non issue for me because I’m never reading for 8 hours continuously. 😂
I have a kindle paperwhite and just got an I pad for reading my textbooks and taking notes! I can’t wait to read kindle books on my I pad when I want color!! Especially for reading fantasy books with maps it’s great to see it in color.
what I like on ipad and not yet available on kindle is immersive reading, which is great
I’m a bit confused. On my kindles I have either the “text to speech“ or the “reading assistant” function for audio. Additionally I can add the complementary audio book (listening on the Kindle or my phone). For me, the iPad “text to speech” function is clunky.
It amazes me how people still use white screens on their devices. Even with the lowest light, night shift and reduce white point, white light can be so painful to the eyes. Some apps/websites do not allow dark modes, and I am so tired of asking for it.
Dark mode doesn't only save you from going almost blind, but I heard it is also great to save battery.
Thanks for the video! :)
For working people, I can't imagine using anything other than an iPad. Its rare I have the time to fully isolate into reading a book for long periods of time; I'm always getting some type of notification whether it be for my business or personal. The ability to pause my reading and switch right there to what I need to look at (or do) is wonderful. And I can do it on the same device! Once, I'm done (which isn't hopefully too long), I can go back to where I left off in the book.
Great video. Hopefully you enlightened a few folks on the benefits of using the iPad as an e-reader.
I use my ipad mini 5 as my ebook reader and the Mapleread app. Perfect for me.
Recently, I bought Janson's History of Art for Kindle on my iPad.
The color illustrations are shockingly good... better than the print book I had years ago in college. And they are hi-res... so they can be enlarged to see details without breaking up. Amazing!
Also got a huge book about the wine business. 2500 pages. You can imagine how heavy and awkward either of these books would be in print!
Thank you!
As much as I’d like to have a Scribe, my iPad Pro does what I need to take notes in my Bible, etc. I use my Oasis for just reading.
Good information. Reading e-books is actually the reason I got my first iPad. I’m always surprised how people buy an iPad and never bother to learn how to use it to its max. Why spend that kind of money without learning everything it can do?
True. I love reading those manuals apple offers in their book store
If you can deal with the horrible unresponsiveness of kindle screen for highlighting , then it’s a great tool. Otherwise go for the iPad and Apple Pencil.
For my old and sensitive eyes, iPad Pro is the easiest. Less eye strains than Kindles for me. I believe the newer kindles are better, but old kindles were like reading softly printed fonts on gray newspaper like texture. My eyes had to try harder to read.
Thank you for these tips I got the matte screen protector and it has helped tremendously
I read off my iPad all the time using Books app. It’s nice and easy and feels like reading a regular book.
Stop lying. Reading on an IPad is nothing like the experience of reading a book. The harsh light on an IPad is bad for your eyes.
A Kindle is designed with e-ink to be easy on your eyes. At night you can use its yellow light which is very easy on the eyes. The color of the text and the lighted page is just like a book.
@@JesusSavesSinnersKindle is weak and pathetic for reading anything. God help anybody who thinks the Kindle is better.
@@JesusSavesSinners Well…of course using ANY device to read a book will never be the exact same as picking up an actual book, but there is no doubt e-readers/ipads is really convenient in many ways. For example: it saves space, you have more than just 1 or 2 books to read/carry all on 1 device and it helps me stay focused (again, for ME). I never had a kindle scribe but since I have an iPad, I’D say it is just as good as a regular book if not better. You can adjust the brightness to your liking on both the iPad & in the kindle app so that’s not even an issue. Besides, you can still strain your eyes reading a regular book book small text anyway.
I also understand why people would prefer a physical book, but since I have a lot of books already and is tight for space, reading on my iPad is a much better choice/option. Sometimes I use my phone if I don’t want to carry an 11in iPad everywhere I go. So no, it’s not “a lie” or terrible choice to use an iPad to read. At least you can see the covers of the books in color rather than plain black and white.🤷🏼♀️
That's a lot of work. What I enjoy about the Kindle is it forces me to not get distracted by any other apps.
that is exactly why i stop reading on ipad and came back to kindle
Swipe down. Tap focus mode. Done… no notifications. iPad for the win. 😀
Ignorant. That doesn't do anything. The temptation to use all the features of the IPad is still right there.
An IPad is not a good reading experience. It is much heavier to hold. The light on the IPad is hard on your eyes.
People who use a Kindle understand why a Kindle is far superior to any other device for reading books.
It takes five seconds to change the settings around
@@wondawomenluvsupaman I have several different iPads. Anytime I want to read with them I either use a stand or I use another method to hold it up. iPads are too heavy to hold and read with like a book or a Kindle e-reader.
The books I will read with the ipad are picture books like Ken Burns the Civil War. I have a lot of books like that.
I can read all day and have with a Kindle e-reader, I have 8+ Kindle e-readers. I own every new model except for the Scribe I have No use for that one right now.
After an hour my eyes hurt reading on an iPad. The iPad or any other tablet computer is Good for Books with pictures but if you are an avid Book reader always use the Kindle the reading experience cannot be topped. The Kindle's least expensive model now has a built in light making it an outstanding device. I bought mine for Less than $50.00 Brand New ew. I paid $150 for the most recent Kindle Oasis I bought the newest Model Brand New.
People like to complain about the price for a New Kindle e-reader but I have Never paid full price for a New Kindle. Several times a Year they go on sale for huge discounts. My Kindle Oasis was more than 60% off.
You can try and pretend that an iPad is a good device for reading on but it is Not. This video is laughable...
These are precisely the steps I have been using for reading on my surface go. I believe that this actually tops the Kindle Oasis because. I can and usually do turn it to read in landscape mode and the Kindle app breaks it into a left and right page. The Oasis does not do that. So yeah, 10 inch tablet plus matte screen protector plus blue light filter. Makes it a pretty good experience to me. In addition with the app you can do text-to-speech while you're reading. You can't do that with an actual Kindle. My Surface Go has a great pen that I can use with Onenote or with the Kindle app...but to me even better is the magnetically attachable keyboard, which lets me make notes faster.
Wow. My first video to adddress this question. And I don’t think it could have been done better. Thank you! 😁subscribed 👍
Fantastic and very useful content! I love my Kindle but hated trying to read on the iPad. Trying some of these now and it is improving the experience tremendously!
amazing, glad it helped
Clear instructions are good and useful in this video. Comments so far conflate:
Using iPad for reading, if so, then maximizing comfort on eyes using settings and possibly screen protector.
This is not a kindle replacement but it is maximizing utility of an iPad for reading and note taking.
Thank you for the useful tips. Other commentators: Try to understand the intention and if commentating add value by describing the difference in comfort on the eyes for using the iPad "Before vs After" + "vs the kindle" in some sort of useful way eg minutes of reading before discomfort sets in.
1) Shoving your iPad under the pillow or dropping it by the bed is not a good idea. Kindle can live with it.
2) Reading in a bath - won't risk an iPad.
3) iPad can hardly fit in a backpack, while Kindle feels ok in a coat pocket or a handbag.
4) Reading an iPad in a packed subway - crazy idea.
Yet making notes while reading is cool.
@@dhrtiwalter8670coming from NYC, reading an iPad on a subway is like asking to get robbed
Great video!!!
You saved me $200 for a new Kindle. I have an iPad Pro, but the glare and high color wasn’t pleasant to use for reading.
Thanks
great tips! Although I'm a big fan of matte screen protectors (I have them on all of my touchscreen devices), I agree with your assessment regarding the downsides. The deficiencies are more noticeable on my iPads that have laminated screens, but on my iPad 9th gen (non-laminated) the matte protector seems to reduce the visual affect of the air gap. That was a nice accidental benefit.
I use my ipad to read books and enjoy that 💗👍🏼
I love my I pad and my kindle!! I love both!!
Amazing video, Samuel! Thanks for sharing!
Cheers from Brazil!
Thanks for watching!
Its a totally different thing. I don't like reading ebooks on my iPad or phone as the light is horrible for reading, also as other people mention there is no distraction on the ereader also I love to mark and create notes and have them in one place.
I have both ipad and Kindle but I never reach for Kindle at all.. ipad is good for me
can you buy kindle books on iPad? if you dont have Kindle device
Yes, you absolutely can
I also like to set up a focus mode and change the display to grayscale
Yes, dark modes and such help. But at the end of the day, you're still reading on an LCD/OLED panel. And it won't ever be as enjoyable as a Kindle for a serious reader. You can optimize it to make it less bad. But it's still no E-Ink for longer reading.
The only benefit of an iPad or Amazon Fire tablet is that since they are colored displays, they tend to be a bit better for reading comics on. This is because the color is used quite a bit for expression in comics. Plus since they use word bubbles, the larger displays allow you to see the text in those small bubbles easier.
But for any regular book the Kindle all day. Comics the tablet is probably best in my opinion. That's why I just purchased the new "Amazon Fire HD 10 Plus" tablet. Plus since it's made by Amazon the Kindle app will likely offer the best and most optimized experience on a Fire tablet.
I have the "Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition" as well. Plus I ordered the all-new Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra with the S-Pen for Kindle on the go too. (For short-term reading on breaks at work and such.) 🙂
Yeah I completely agree, as someone who owns kindles, if I have one to hand I will always grab it over the iPad for the reasons you’ve said. But if I didn’t have one or had gone somewhere with my iPad instead and no kindle I would definitely still use it and with some changes to the set up it’s much more enjoyable than otherwise. I’d be interested to hear your thought on using the Samsung. I have an iPhone 14 pro as my device and carry a 14 plus for my work and never use either for reading. Maybe I should.
True. Well said.
Goodness, you are where many of us were back in 2015. The best device for the Kindle App is the Microsoft Surface Duo phones surg side by side pages. 2 pages side by side, pages turn like a real book, and super lightweight.
The issue with the brightness remains.
I’m sure the Duo can provide a good experience but the aim of the video was to help people get more out of tech they already own rather need to buy more.
@@samuelbuckingham Sure, understood that. I've spent 7 years trying to address this problem across IPads, Android, Windows devices and now Eink tablets. So far the best ones are the Andoid based Surface Duo and the Kindle Scribe.
I think the default iBooks screen is white becase traditional paper books are white, and this is part of the skewmorphic design, with the animated page transitions, etc.
Wow! Game changing tips. Thank you!
Very precise information and useful.
Thank you very much! This will be a big help!
great tips, been doing all of these for years since my old ipad2 pretty much just works as an ebook reader nowadays lol and it performs flawlessly at that.
Perfect! Just what I needed because shelling out more cash for another device just seems ridiculous and I would rather remain within the Apple ecosystem.
Nice video! Could you please put the link to the screen protector you are using?
No problem, I have added it to the description, but here's another link
amzn.to/3JwenJw
@@samuelbuckingham thank you!
Thank you for the tips!!
Well, i don't have an Ipad but a Samsung Tab S6 and i tried to read a book on it. It's not very comfortable because of its weight. A tablet can not replace a Kindle.
Using the kindle app on my iPad Pro 12.9 is amazing I could turn the page with a mouse
I’ve just bought a Scribe after using my iPad to read Kindle books for the last couple of years. I prefer to scroll as I read rather than tap to turn the pages but I can’t see a way to do this on my new scribe, can you tell me if this is possible please, and if so how? Thank you.
The Kindle App on the iPad mini 6 is so slow to load and sometimes it takes five minutes to start
how can i get those theme settings on ipad while reading? i mean which app i need to use/download???
i think it's the kindle app he's using.
What about word wise on the ipad kindle? I can't activate it?
How many books can you store on the iPad?
I wouldn't get a kindle scribe but I do have a paperwhite. The paperwhite is great for just reading. Using my ipad or phone for reading is just too distracting and exhausting for my eyes.
Not that much money. I have an iPad, yet using a kindle device is very much worth it in my opinion.
Which app was that ?
Great content, great video! Best of luck buddy on your RUclips journey. 👍👍
Thanks a lot! It’s actually not my not channel but thought I would focus on on some things I really enjoy. I appreciate the support.
My iPad Mini is perfect as a Kindle/Reader, but all the other iPads are too big and too heavy!
Ty!
I hate the kindle is black & white. Ruined the experience for me.
It won’t be for long, way too many competitors which colour e ink screens now.
Hi Samuel. Good luck with your channel
Thanks a lot!
The coolest part about an ipad is it doesn't need a case.
Get a magnetic matte screen protector, problem solved
What is the link to your screen protector?
Same. I was wondering which one it was as well.
Appologies, I struggled to locate it at first but have since added it to the description. Here it is
amzn.to/3JwenJw
Can apple pencil be used to annotate on kindle app?
iPad mini. Never had a problem. I read with a white background, no issues.
Thank you for posting! Fun and useful video.
I prefer reading without back lighting
Excellent Tx
Using Procreate with the paper cover (I have the magnetic one) drives me mad... It causes me issues when drawing. So I took it off.
If I wouldn’t appreciate paper like experience with Kindle, I could as well read on my iPhone. IPad is bulky and heavy.
thankyou -just was gifted a new iPad so this will really help me
Use a magnetic removable screen protector. Best of both worlds!
How to write on kindle app on ipad ??!!
But Kindle app doesn't work on my ipad and idk why 😢
There’s no ‘word wise’ on ipad. 😢
Does anyone has the issue of Android Kindle reading app refuses to reduce brightness level? Even when I reduce brightness in the main menu of my tablet (Xiaomi Redmi Pad 2022) the Kindle app doesn't respond to it and stays too bright (even when on minimum brightness level). During the day that's not a big issue but in the night it's really painfull to read.
Kindles are pretty dang cheap these days.
Most of us read all day on our devices and I prefer the iPad to read, it's faster and crisper. quite easy to change the contrasts and brightness. The only thing I wouldn't do with my iPad is use that utterly hopeless apple pencil.
Matt screen protector
It’s not worthy having that effect with the protector, you lose a lot of brightness and resolution, which are advantages of the iPad screen
you do realize stuff is tailored from the very conception to do one thing, and as such, using stuff for the thing it was built will give you the best bang for your buck, regardless of what it is. dont shocked by that.. of course you ca utilize things for the stuff they were not built for, and i have some funny scenarios in my mind right now
this video could have been about 45 second long. good grief.
Kindle are over priced slow pieces of junk that don’t last long. Waste of money. For every pro I can find a con. I use my kindle fire to read on. Way faster, cheaper, I can turn brightness down, use the blue light dimming, I have a screen protector that’s great for reading. I don’t get why people swear by the kindle lol
i was also trying to simulate the kindle experience in my tablet, and i found "tracing paper" can give you that paper look if you put it on top of the screen, but idk if its a good idea.
That’s not a million miles off what the Matt screen protectors are the do have the look and feel of tracing paper so I bet the end result is very similar
no, painful in the eyes
Ipad battery is terrible even for reading wtf! Only reason i have a kindle. Kindle gives me a month of worry free battery. If you love reading you know you want half the day to yourself. The ipad doesnt give me that!
which country are you from brother? Your accent seems unnoticable to me..
I’m from the UK
That ipad is just to big for an ebook reader
I read books on my iPhone 7 lmao !
I just read kindle on my phone..😅
LOL. IPAD can never be a kindle in million years. It is an expensive tool to play CANDY CRUSH.
LOL. I laugh at BOTH of you in real book in my hand, which cannot be retroactively censored/modified or summarily ERASED, without you breaking into my room and finding where I hid it.
At my age I am finding my Kindle Paperwhite or old iPad mini is much less weighty and awkward than a large print hardcover book. Also, i read when awaking in the wee hours; at those times dark mode is invaluable for not disturbing my sleeping wife LOL 😉
@@Stalinfalcon I do read books.
Why you hating? Maybe people like reading on a iPad, why people have need to make every into opposites groups? People with books making fun of kindle users, kindle users of iPad users? We all read fucking books chill out
Kindle books you purchase are safe from being charged. All you have to do is to turn off automatic book 📖 updates.
The ability to have my entire book library in my hands at the same time beats a paper book every day of the week. I also have thousands of 100% free Kindle books 📚. Not garbage books no one wants to read. Books that are offered free from current top authors. I have gotten all the classics for free too. I happen to love the classics. The cost of buy new best-selling novels is a lot less expensive than buying the paper version. Kindle daily, weekly and monthly deals deeply discount every top selling authors books. A $45.00 book 📖 will cost $3.00. The price to build a high quality library is incredibly cheap compared to what physical books cost.
Thing is you can’t download books via the app.
HUH?
@@honestabe1940 you can’t download books!
why you talk so much and dont get to the point
Ignorant video!!!! You do not understand what a Kindle is!!!
A Kindle is like reading a book 📖. It is very lightweight, the reading experience is just like an actual book. The cost of a Kindle is 10 time less than an IPad too.
An IPad is very heavy compared to a Kindle. The reading experience is not nearly as good. Also an IPad includes a lot of distractions.
Maybe check out my video before this where I compare every model of kindle as I’ve been using them every day for about 15 years and love them. The point of this video isn’t if your thinking about buying a kindle, then buy an iPad instead. It’s if you already own an iPad can you get a decent reading experience from it and I believe with these tips you definitely can.
@@samuelbuckinghamAnyone who is an avid reader would never consider an iPhone an iPad, any phone or tablet a good device for reading.
I have owned several different iPhones and 7 or so different iPads. I currently have and use 2 iPads. I tried using the Kindle app for years on phones and on tablets including the iPad. Trying to read on these gave me terrible headaches. Not to mention with the heavy tablets, including the iPad. It was very tiring to hold them for reading. I would prop them up on a pillow or try anything to be able to read without hurting my hands and getting my arms tired.
So 8 years ago I decided I would try using a Kindle because I had already invested a lot of money in my Kindle library. I discovered that people who love using the Kindle e-ink reader were right. I talked to friends of mine who used them, looked at theirs before I bought mine.
I right now own and use 6 different versions of the Kindle from the 1st 10 inch Kindle to my Kindle Oasis.
I use them exactly like a Book. I enjoy reading several different books at a time. So I go from one Kindle with a book I am currently reading to another Kindle with another book 📚 I am currently reading. I know other people who do this too. They even have a Kindle with Mystery books only on it another with only Classic Books on it and so on.
I would never tell someone that an iPad was a good device for reading books on. An iPad is a horrible device for reading books on.
Anyone who can afford an iPad can afford to buy a Kindle. Any iPad user who is an avid reader will get headaches from using an iPad to read on, that is a scientific fact.
People who read on iPads are not avid readers. For example there are people like yourself who make videos exactly like this one about the iPad. I have talked with them and got them to be honest. In truth these people do not enjoy reading. When they read they read a physical book. Yes they only read one book on an iPad to make their videos.
I have talked with numerous different iPad readers as well. I discovered they really could not be called iPad book readers either because at best they would complete 3 books a year.
Many people who are in the comment section on these videos are not readers. They are casual readers at best. They read less than 2 hours a week. What they do is read for 15 minutes before they go to bed.
@@samuelbuckingham This video is great. I have a lot of trouble reading on the Kindle device outside. I also like to switch between audible and the Kindle app and you need the ipad for that. The Kindle App does so much more than the Kindle device. Thanks for the tip on the screen cover. I'll give that a try. This is definitely not an old problem.
@@barbararosswriter I have never had any trouble reading my Kindle e-ink readers outside.
Frankly it's pretty Stupid to try and use any type of screen in direct sunlight. It is Not a good thing to spend time outside in direct sunlight.
You obviously are Not an Avid reader.
Kindles and other e-ink readers are extremely popular among Avid readers because they absolutely cannot be beat. The e-ink technology is so good that the screen looks like an actual book, very easy on the eyes.
Kindle e-ink readers are far Superior to an iPad because an iPad is very harsh light to try and read on for very long. iPads are very heavy for holding and trying to read on for a long time. Kindles have a very long battery life. iPads have very short battery life in comparison.
A Kindle e-ink reader is something you can easily take anywhere, just put it in your pocket. If you happen to lose it you are not going to be losing the price of an iPad which is 10 times or more expensive. You can leave your Kindle on your desk at work and not fear someone will steal it. I have had 2 iPads stolen from me. People love to steal Apple products.
It can never be a kindle because you cannot read it in the sunshine