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Amazon attempting to monopolise their platforms as well as the book distribution is disgusting and baffles me that so many people seem to be ok with this. The $20 dollars to remove undisclosed ads from a device you paid for is the cherry on top and actually made me laugh
Yes, and for me this was the actual dealbreaker. I will *not* buy a product to watch the seller’s ads and I will *not* buy a product to bow to their “platform”. Same reason why I won’t buy a Scamsung TV until they stop with menu ads. I went with a Kobo and I couldn’t be happier.
The primary advantage of Kobo ereaders is that you can support independent booksellers with your purchases. I bought a Kobo ereader because I was looking to dissociate myself from the Amazon platform.
I have Kindle Oasis and Kobo Sage. I'd give a slight edge to Kobo primarily because of Dropbox and the ability to add books outside the Amazon and Kobo ecosystem.
Is the Sage battery life satisfactory? I was tempted by it since my current Kobo Aura is aging gracefully, but the reviews on the Sage's battery life gave me pause. I like my ereader's battery to last a good week.
You can now easily add epubs or virtually any format to kindle wirelessly via the cloud. No dropbox subscription necessary. Kindle even syncs your progress across multiple devices, including your phone, for these side loaded books. Even kobo doesn’t do that. Kindle has massively leapfrogged Kobo in this area.
I agree a hundred percent (I haven’t watched the video, just went straight to the comments 😅). I find the experience of reading on kobo zillion times more pleasant. But the browsing experience on the website sucks, esp for the language I want to read in.
For me, as a non-English reader (I mean I read also English books but most of the books I read aren't in English and are neither in the Amazon store nor in a Kobo one) Kindle is unrivaled when you want to have books bought in different stores. I can push these books also to Amazon account and have access to them on every device with Android or IOS. It's not possible on Kobo because you have access only to books bought in the Kobo store. So I think everything depends on what a person needs.
@@xJillie hmm. well, I am learning Japanese manga and the 8 inches makes a huge difference. I have an oasis too but since I got my kobo I retired my Kindle. I also prefer the rubber more than the metal, I don't like that it feels cold on my skin :P I have a kobo forma and it is nice to hold in my hand. For some odd reason, I feel it is easier on my eyes. That one i can't explain why and I never researched the surface materials or technology. But I must say - page turn is quicker on kindle - buying and browsing are much nicer on the Kindle ecosystem, despite how some people feel about Amazon as a company.
The ePub and Overdrive support on Kobo is the reason I prefer the Kobo. I hate that Amazon is designing their eReader to consolidate a monopoly over book sales. If I want to read a book published by an author on their own website (ePub format), then why would I bother with an eReader that won't let me support that author? My local public library also has a great eBook catalogue, so no Overdrive support is an absolute deal-breaker. Amazon forbids me from supporting my own local library? Nope. Not happening! Kobo seems like it's actually designed for readers by readers. They know we don't always go to the same book store to buy our books, and that we like to support our local libraries!
I have a Kindle and a Kobo, and prefer the Kobo for one small petty difference. The page numbering. The Kindle shows the page number of the physical book, so while I am reading, I swipe a few pages on the Kindle to advance a single page, while the Kobo shows the number of pages in the ebook, so every swipe advances the page number. It also adjust the pages as I change the font/size. I find this easier to predict how long I will have to read until the next chapter, as the Kindle "x minutes left in the chapter" doesnt reflect the number of times I get distracted while reading.
This is my reason too 😂 I can see … okay I have 15 pages in this chapter and 30 mins before work I can totally read that before work lol But 15 pages on kindle might say 52 min left in chapter and your like WHAT! I don’t have time for this lol but really you do 😂
Thankyou, Maneetpaul. That was a very thorough comparison. I’m in Australia. I’ve had a Kindle since 2011, but I’m thinking of getting a Kobo, mainly because I don’t like Amazon as a company, and I’d be happier supporting Kobo - plus their devices seem great. I’ve learned a lot about Kobo from you here. And your point about the freedom of really owning the ePub books I buy is an important one. Many thanks!
Thanks for another great video. I have both the Kobo Clara and a 10th generation Kindle Paper white. I find the Kobo so much easier to use to check out library books. I read a lot of library books and tend to be forgetful about returning them. The Kobo has paid for itself with the amount of money that I am no longer spending on fines. I do like the Kindle and the Amazon book selection. I’ve saved quite a bit buying ebooks rather than physical copies. I think that if I had to pick one over the other, I would go with the Kobo, solely because of the amount of books I check out from my library.
There’s a free e reader program called Calibre that allows you to change what format an ebook is in. I took an entire collection of ebooks and took them from epub to mobi very quickly. I haven’t messed with the more advanced settings, but you can alter things like line spacing and indentation during the reformatting process.
I used Calibre back in 2016 from kindle books to Kobo & loved it. Used it for back up & storage in Calibre in case I ever lost all kindle books (didn’t have kindle, only used app). Unfortunately, I lost my Kobo during my travel / gap year, so looking to purchase Kindle soon.
No mention of format conversion with Calibre? Kindle only supporting azw and mobi doesn’t mean you won’t be able to read anything in epub, converting is free and easy.
Both my kindles stopped syncing with Calibre after an update. When I called Amazon for support they told me they couldn’t help but I could email anything I wanted to convert and they’d apply it to my devices as PDFs. I got frustrated and switched to Kobo… which I now love.
I personally have a Kindle, but by far the most frustrating part is how all cover dimensions don't match. Some are way too small while other too large. It happens either in the library view or when the Kindle is on standby.
I have an Oasis and a Kobo. I prefer the Kobo reading experience, but like many, I am in the Amazon ecosystem with the books. However, I do the majority of my reading on my Kobo. My only gripe with the Kobo is there seems to be a glitch with the turn page button. After a while, the button will stop responding, and then you have to touch the screen to turn the page, and somehow it activates the button again. Very annoying but not a deal-breaker.
Super helpful video discussing the software differences. I was on the fence of which e-reader to go with. I think I know now. Had NO IDEA about prime reading and the free monthly book. So many missed free books. But thank you for this tip!
Kobo does have bold feature but it only is on certain fonts. For example choose "Caecilia" then you get "Advanced" for more options, choose it and you can see the example of now and with change, "before" and "after". Here you can adjust Font Size and Weight (boldness) with a sliding scale. The fonts available for weight are Amasis, Avenir, Caecilia, Georgia, Gill Sans, Kobo Nickel, Malabar. I believe on the Kindle "bold" is only available for certain fonts too.
Thanks for doing this comparison. My biggest issue with Kindles (and Amazon tablets) is the ads, and constant upsells. It's like flying Spirit Airlines at all time. If I'm spending $150 on your tablet, and the first thing I see when I open the screen is "pay us $20 more for no ads" it is an instant frustration, and just so.... Amazon.
I have both devices. I prefer the Kobo screen over the Kindle, just because it's not flushed and it does look better and sharper. However, comfort wise, I have to give it to the Kindle. The Kindle Paperwhite 2021 with a case and pop socket is still lighter than my bare Kobo Libra 2 and does not strain at all.
I have both and for some reason I always go back to the Kindle. It might be because it’s where I started. But I just feel more comfortable with the kindle layout, reading experience, store, sideloading, etc. I have everything set up just right. With kobo, I couldn’t get the sideloaded books to look right. EPUB was fussy and kepub didn’t have the settings I wanted. I also use Kindle Unlimited a lot so that is a big plus for me. The wireless options with kindle are much better than with kobo, I have found, especially with note taking and highlights, etc.
I own a kobo, mainly because of the epub format and my Kobo Libra has probably more adjustable night light adjustment settings but kindle seems awesome too and as a Prime subscriber I'll definitely look into the books I can get monthly. thanks so much for the review
Great video. I’ve been a kindle user since the very first iteration and this year considered Kobo to get away from it. I did hear kobo was getting more invasive with the store though. I ended up getting a pocketbook era instead and the customization in the os is fantastic. I can read my own epubs and moved my kindle books there as well with a bit of work.
I would add that the Kobo Plus has three subscription options: a Kindle Unlimited rival that offers ebooks for 10 dollars per month, a similar subscription that offers audiobooks for 10 dollars per month and - to conclude - an all-in-one option that offers both ebooks and audiobooks for 13 dollars per month.
Regarding what you've said about kobo books: you can't transfer them across multiple devices unless you strip the DRM. Just having the same epub format isn't enough. The Advanced setting for fonts is available on the Kobo for its standard fonts. If you sideload fonts or use the Publisher Font, the Advanced tab isn't available. However, there is a patch for this, which I've applied to my Libra 2, that enables the Advanced settings for sideloaded fonts, and also does other things if you enable this in the patch. I had lots of problems with this patch, but got help from mobileread.
Kindle does this now, but better than kobo as it syncs your progress for sideloaded books too. You also don’t need a dropbox or Google Drive account to do it wirelessly
Immediately ran and got the Kobo. The interface is so much cleaner looking and interesting. I hope people get more into Kobo to enhance the book store. But the look is significant better
@@marissa630 yeah, I also keep it on Goodreads. But I also keep a wish list on Amazon, so I can see if something is on sale for example. That’s not doable with Goodreads. Or with Kobo, since it doesn’t allow sorting by price
since you can convert EPUBs to AWZ/Mobi and back using Calibre that point barely matters, it's just a matter of convenience and speaking of which apparently you can read EPUBs on your kindle by using the Send To Kindle feature which automatically converts it.
I have - and totally love - my two superstars: Kindle Voyage (oldie but goldie) and Kobo Libra 2 (my latest discovery). In my experience, you can't top that combo. The Oasis and Sage both seem like an overkill to me while these two have precisely what it takes to help me enjoy the ebook universe without borders.
@@Maneetpaul great question! I've had my Kindle Voyage since late 2014, if memory serves, and all those years later, it still works amazingly well. What a great ereader! I use it to read all my Amazon/Mobi books. Then one day around Christmas 2021, I watched one of your videos, which inspired me to look into the latest Kindle Paperwhite, but then I also saw one on Kobo. I'd never actually heard of Kobo before, so I did some research and concluded that investing money into a device that not only worked great (based on so many other great comments) but could also allow me to use many other formats would be a great gift I could give myself. So, in a way, both devices complement each other nicely. The Libra 2 contains so many great books that are mainly Epub files while the Voyage stayed my Amazon go-to device. Not sure about others who still use their Voyage, but mine is absolutely in perfect condition, including the battery, which is still intact.
I miss my voyage so much. I only traded it because of some eye issues and I needed the warm light option. The voyage was the ultimate ereader though! I very much enjoy my Kobo and my Oasis, but for different reasons.
I own a Voyage too and "oldie but goldie" is the best description! My Voyage is a bit tattered because I've used it without a case for so long but it's lasted 7 years now with no major hiccups, though it's getting a bit slow lately. I am currently trying to choose between the Kobo Libra 2 and the Kindle Paperwhite Signature, one thing that concerns me is that the processor on the Kobo Libra 2 seems kind of slow - from what I understand it's the same as the cheapest Kobo model, Kobo Clara, which isn't encouraging. Have you experienced any lag on your device?
I've been a long time Kindle user and have owned almost every Kindle Amazon has ever produced, from the original Kindle, the Kindle Fire, Oasis, and Paperwhite. They were all nice devices, other than the Fire which was just a cheap tablet rather than an ereader. That being said, my latest ereader is a Kobo, and I can't see myself ever going back to a Kindle. I do give Amazon the props for kickstarting the e-ink ereader market. If not for the Kindle backed by the Amazon ebook store, this market might not even exist.
I almost never use my personal computer, so all of the wireless features on the Kindle are a must-have for me. It’s so easy to email articles and PDFs from my phone, and conversely it’s incredibly easy to email myself highlights and notes I’ve made to library books. If I didn’t live in the USA I’d probably switch since I use the library all the time, but there’s currently no incentive for me to switch to Kobo when the Kindle has so many features I use and love. ETA I’ve also never had issues converting ePub to Mobi, so even that isn’t a reason for me to switch. And all of that can be done on the phone with conversion websites 🤷🏻♀️.
The wireless features are KEY. I'm shocked Kobo doesn't have something like that. Dropbox support is nice, but making it only available on the premium Kobos is something I don't understand. I remember trying to send a PDF to my Kobo once and I had to connect it via USB because I couldn't figure out any other way to easily do it.
Apparently they opened up for epub support a few months after this video was published, allowing you to send epubs to your kindle e-mail, they would then convert it and allow it on the reader.
I choose kobo over kindle, BUT the price between kobo clara hd and kindle paperwhite 11th is the same in my country, and people said that kindle 11th is crispier than kobo clara hd.. so i decided to go with kindle, price wise...
Amazon has the largest shop, but with Kobo you can easily buy from other shops as well as using the Kobo shop as it supports E-Pub. This fact not being clearly mentioned when comparing shops is a fail from the reviewer. Combine this with the DRM issue when using a kindle... It's quite easy to point out a winner....
He talks about Kobo supporting E-Pub and being able to read your downloaded ebooks from other sources between around 9:03 and 9:35, is that what you mean?
@@TerribleForm he does yeah, but when he talks about the size of the respective stores he says Kindle wins because it’s larger, almost forgetting about what he said about Kobo supporting all epubs. If a book is on the Kindle Store, but not the Kobo store (already unlikely) then either the author is self-published through Amazon or the book will be available to buy as an epub elsewhere and can easily be read on the Kobo. No independent publisher would ever just sell via Kindle. So the size comparison of the stores is just a non-issue.
I have both and I found myself reading more with my kindle rather than with the kobo. The kindle books are better formated and the system is less buggy but there are a few things that kobo shows that the kindle can't. For instance, % or number of pages in a chapter. But overall, both are really good.
@@W3TFART I don know who you talking to but your not going to do it to me you don’t have to get it no one is forcing you you need help if you getting this upset
I personally have a Kindle but I also have a boox e reader (poke) android os. Installed moon reader pro and it is perfect, the e ink display is different than kindle though the text looks more grainy, not an issue it gives it the affect of text printed on rougher paper
@@Maneetpaul check it out on the plays tore there is a free version, but it gives a lot of control of what you want the text to look like, it supports multiple formats, it supports multiple cloud storage as well
Kobo is an easy choice, I don’t have to pay for books, I can transfer epub files by plugging it into my laptop. Kindle may have a bigger library but that doesn’t matter when kobo lets you transfer books and with more formats, and since kindle has boycotted you having covers for books you download just so you’re forced to buy books from their store I can’t justify having a kindle
2 questions for you if I may. If u just drag and drop an epub does it display the cover in the kobo? And also i read that if u transfer books this way they are slower to navigate, do you find this to be true? Thanks!
All I'm interested in is screen size of the kobo over my Oasis and 32GB storage. An 8" screen is more suited the actual size of manga as is the increased storage capacity. My Oasis has just 8GB. Otherwise the Oasis is a top tier ereader with great battery life if you are reading typical books and I have logged hundreds of hours on mine. Sage arriving tomorrow to compare.
I’m going to switch to Kobo. I’ve had too many bad experiences with Amazon and I’m just tired of giving them money. I’m excited to borrow books from my library and buying from other places!
Yes, converting between formats is definitely possible. I wanted to stick with the native features for the purpose of the video though, without getting into the third party tools.
Here in The Netherlands Kindle is pretty much dead. So now I am torn between Kobo Clara 2E and Pocketbook Touch HD3. Has anybody any tips to look into before buying?
I use sideloaded fonts, and my kindle loses its last location of the books sometimes when I use sideloaded fonts. Kobo has never had that problem with sideloaded fonts so far.
I'd love to buy a Kobo. But "unfortunately" in my country Kobo really focuses on local publishers and you can only buy from bookstores in my country. 99% of the content I read is not in my native language. So I will buy a Kindle for better access to books from all over the world even though I really don't want to support amazon.
I have 3 Kindles and 1 Kobo, I prefer the Kobo for the compatibility of different ebook formats. 1 Kindle does have built in headphone jack, speakers, mp3 player and txt to speech.
I don’t know what you mean by epub not being supported on Kindle. I’ve read a few epub books on my Paperwhite and, unless I have to manually convert a PDF book into an epub, the difference is barely noticeable. The send to kindle feature which i use for sending epubs to my kindle is super convenient.
That feature wasn’t available when I made this video. But you’re right, it’s much easier now! One thing to note: SendToKindle converts your epub to an Amazon format. It works fine, but it’s not true epub support, which Kobo has.
Good stuff. Enjoying your work here as I'm trying to decide. It's quite a lot of work to leave the Amazon ecosystem They don't make it easy! I think we're getting there... Onto the next video...
In the Netherlands it is actually easier to get Dutch books on Kobo. I only use Amazon to order books (mostly physical) when it's in English and the local store doesnt have it. Kobo+ includes a lot of Dutch books. I somehow stranded on your channel when I was looking for my first ereader. I chose the Kobo Sage for now. I like the 8" size, I don't mind charging it every week. Being stuck on Amazon only made that Kindle wasn't so interesting. Because they don't have enough Dutch stuff.
1:33 here in Brazil (the same country where, apparently, Mr. Apple is prohibited of selling devices with no freaking essential chargers) Amazon is being a good kid and selling Kindle with no ads already… Some would point out how expensive it costs in here (compared to buying in the USA), but literally every tech thing is expensive in here, so them not trying to make us pay for “no ads” means (to me) they’re trying being good kids lol (even though chargers are more essential than a non ad experience)!
On Kobo, as you use it the recommendations on the home screen go away. There will still be the text links at the bottom (you can get rid of those too, with a patch. But that's likely beyond the scope of most users). But there won't be as much advertising on your home screen as the Kindle or Nook ones.
the simple fact that I have to pay to get rid of ads on a product I bought at the same price as one that doesn't do that, is already more than a good reason to choose any other devices
I've owned many Kobo's and Kindles through the years. So I'd say I'm practically an expert. ;) Not that it matters much, but I've been an IT pro for 25 years, so that's the color of my glasses, so to speak. I returned my latest Kobo purchase: the Sage. It was downright terrible. The physical buttons are flimsy, too thin, not 'clicky', don't do a pageturn half the time. It was also rather slow for pageturns and in fact the entire interface, which has always been a problem for Kobo compared to any Kindle. Battery life was a joke, where it should be one of the main selling points compared to tablets. I've always felt Kobo and its OS / software feel like two different entities, just like Android and the phones it runs on. It just doesn't feel like 'one integrated device'. Kindles can be compared with Apple devices in that respect: they feel much more like software and hardware are tweaked to belong together. Also, I've always felt Kobo's feel like pieces of plastic that just don't do their price any justice. There's no premium option like the Kindle Oasis in terms of materials used. As for the user experience of the software: I don't really have a problem with either.. it's just a matter of getting used to it, and very much a personal preference. I really like Word-Wise and Vocabulary Builder on Kindles. On Kobo's, the ability to sideload different formats like e-pubs is an advantage, but it's not very hard to work around that on the closed ecosystem of (Amazon) Kindle. I currently own two Kindles: Paperwhite Signature (2021) and Oasis (2017). Over the past 5 years I've tried the different Kobo's but always went back to my Kindles to do the actual reading. Right now, Kobo would really have to come up with something new for me to give it a try once more... espessially after the Sage experience.
I use the ErgoChair, there's a review of it on my RUclips channel if you want to learn more. I think they've since renamed it to something else, but the chair is the same
For the 5-10min section about Kobo vs Kindle book available. You reference Kobo is better if you already own a huge library of books (digitally ofc) How do people actually do that outside of Amazon? All I know about is amazon or pirating which I don't want to do to authors. I'm thinking of getting a kobo and I want to know what books are available for me to purchase for it (without having one right now) you said that epub books work great on it too. Where do I go for searching and buying books in the meantime without a Kobo, but that I know I can put on there after, since I know you can also dropbox books in.
Ebooks.com is a great place to start for buying digital books that are not tied to Amazon. I agree that it’s really hard to find online booksellers outside of Amazon that are legal. It’s crazy how much control they have over the market.
I'm pretty well stuck in the Kindle ecosystem for life. Started buying books on it in in the late 2000s and now have close to a thousand books, and to be honest I really like their hardware. The 20 bucks to remove ads sucks, but outside of that the hardware for the kindle line is nice. The bad is that I usually use a fire tablet (upgraded from 2015 fire 7 to a 2022 hd 8 recently) for comics just for the color screen (at least til Amazon finally releases a color e-ink reader) and the fire hardware is a bit lacking. It desperately needed a bump to 4 gigs of ram of the most recent release, yet is stuck on 3 gigs still.
Do you need an account for the kobo? For the kindle I don't mind having to login as I own a lot of books on there but I have to login just to read some epubs then no thanks
I have a ton of Google play books going back to a few decades ago, plus epubs and pdf's but I also have a lot of audible and Amazon books, I have a few nook books (just using the app) and at least a few dozen pdf books I've collected over the years. I think I just might have to have BOTH ... or do a lot of converting and importing (or exporting?) Well, I just like the idea of having access to epub books. I just might have to get the kobo and also keep the kindle. I haven't figured out what I'm going to do with my scribd books yet.
I have the paperwhite and the kobo sage. The paperwhite is a good bargain but the sage is a nicer reading experience. Supposedly it’s easy to set up library lending with kobo. I haven’t done that. But I do like how easy it is to read other non kobo books. The screen size of the sage is almost exactly the same size of the whole paperwhite body.
Hi, Maneet; first of all, thanks a lot for your great channel. But I have a question I couldn't find answer in any place. I'm intending to buy a Kobo Clara (due to the size and comfort light), but I'm also Kindle user (PW11 and Oasis 2019); is there a way to synch Kobo and Kindle? Or, most likely, discover anchorage points to continue from the same place on the two platforms? I think it could be a great theme. All the best, greetings from Rio de Janeiro!
I’m interested in getting my first ereader. I’m just frustrated because Amazon’s seems really good, but I’m really trying to distance myself from supporting Amazon.
Hi, I have kindle Paperwhite 2018. (10th gen.) It is working ok with all of its limitations. Kobo libra had just hit the Indian shore and looks pretty good. But as you know there are not many online libraries in India from which one can borrow the books. But at the same time it looks more flexible. What do you think? Is it worth to spend 20 k over already working kindle PW or wait for the release of the new models from Amazon or Rakuten? Thanking you in advance
Isn't The Kobo advantage thing about the side loading your own content and some models having less layers over the e-ink for a slightly clearer rating experience? Plus more affordable models with physical page turn buttons....
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Amazon attempting to monopolise their platforms as well as the book distribution is disgusting and baffles me that so many people seem to be ok with this. The $20 dollars to remove undisclosed ads from a device you paid for is the cherry on top and actually made me laugh
you can contact support and get it removed for free
@@SebHighDef Yes but it shouldn't be there in the first place.
Yes, and for me this was the actual dealbreaker. I will *not* buy a product to watch the seller’s ads and I will *not* buy a product to bow to their “platform”. Same reason why I won’t buy a Scamsung TV until they stop with menu ads.
I went with a Kobo and I couldn’t be happier.
I recently brought the paperwhite 11th gen 2021 and I don't see any ads.
You get a discount for the version with ads. If you don't want to see ads, buy the Kindle at full price. What is your problem?
The primary advantage of Kobo ereaders is that you can support independent booksellers with your purchases. I bought a Kobo ereader because I was looking to dissociate myself from the Amazon platform.
How has the disassociation going? I’m looking to do so as well.
Lol okay bro
I have Kindle Oasis and Kobo Sage. I'd give a slight edge to Kobo primarily because of Dropbox and the ability to add books outside the Amazon and Kobo ecosystem.
Dropbox support is awesome, I wish it was available on all Kobos though.
Is the Sage battery life satisfactory? I was tempted by it since my current Kobo Aura is aging gracefully, but the reviews on the Sage's battery life gave me pause. I like my ereader's battery to last a good week.
You can now easily add epubs or virtually any format to kindle wirelessly via the cloud. No dropbox subscription necessary. Kindle even syncs your progress across multiple devices, including your phone, for these side loaded books. Even kobo doesn’t do that. Kindle has massively leapfrogged Kobo in this area.
I have both, and the actual reading experience is so much better with my Kobo. Plus, they price match by an extra 10%
I agree a hundred percent (I haven’t watched the video, just went straight to the comments 😅). I find the experience of reading on kobo zillion times more pleasant. But the browsing experience on the website sucks, esp for the language I want to read in.
What makes the reading experience better? I have an Oasis and really love it, am curious to hear what could be better on it.
For me, as a non-English reader (I mean I read also English books but most of the books I read aren't in English and are neither in the Amazon store nor in a Kobo one) Kindle is unrivaled when you want to have books bought in different stores. I can push these books also to Amazon account and have access to them on every device with Android or IOS. It's not possible on Kobo because you have access only to books bought in the Kobo store.
So I think everything depends on what a person needs.
@@xJillie hmm. well, I am learning Japanese manga and the 8 inches makes a huge difference. I have an oasis too but since I got my kobo I retired my Kindle.
I also prefer the rubber more than the metal, I don't like that it feels cold on my skin :P
I have a kobo forma and it is nice to hold in my hand.
For some odd reason, I feel it is easier on my eyes. That one i can't explain why and I never researched the surface materials or technology.
But I must say
- page turn is quicker on kindle
- buying and browsing are much nicer on the Kindle ecosystem, despite how some people feel about Amazon as a company.
@@bitteralmonds666 kobo has that as well 🙄
What a great comparison. I spend 99.9% of my time on my kobo just reading, so the reading experience is the only thing that influenced my choice.
The ePub and Overdrive support on Kobo is the reason I prefer the Kobo. I hate that Amazon is designing their eReader to consolidate a monopoly over book sales. If I want to read a book published by an author on their own website (ePub format), then why would I bother with an eReader that won't let me support that author? My local public library also has a great eBook catalogue, so no Overdrive support is an absolute deal-breaker. Amazon forbids me from supporting my own local library? Nope. Not happening! Kobo seems like it's actually designed for readers by readers. They know we don't always go to the same book store to buy our books, and that we like to support our local libraries!
Kindle for a long time now supports epub, and virtually every other format. This video is incorrect and contains long outdated information
I have a Kindle and a Kobo, and prefer the Kobo for one small petty difference. The page numbering. The Kindle shows the page number of the physical book, so while I am reading, I swipe a few pages on the Kindle to advance a single page, while the Kobo shows the number of pages in the ebook, so every swipe advances the page number. It also adjust the pages as I change the font/size. I find this easier to predict how long I will have to read until the next chapter, as the Kindle "x minutes left in the chapter" doesnt reflect the number of times I get distracted while reading.
I never knew this! Thanks for sharing!
This is my reason too 😂 I can see … okay I have 15 pages in this chapter and 30 mins before work I can totally read that before work lol
But 15 pages on kindle might say 52 min left in chapter and your like WHAT! I don’t have time for this lol but really you do 😂
Thankyou, Maneetpaul. That was a very thorough comparison. I’m in Australia. I’ve had a Kindle since 2011, but I’m thinking of getting a Kobo, mainly because I don’t like Amazon as a company, and I’d be happier supporting Kobo - plus their devices seem great. I’ve learned a lot about Kobo from you here. And your point about the freedom of really owning the ePub books I buy is an important one. Many thanks!
Thanks for another great video. I have both the Kobo Clara and a 10th generation Kindle Paper white. I find the Kobo so much easier to use to check out library books. I read a lot of library books and tend to be forgetful about returning them. The Kobo has paid for itself with the amount of money that I am no longer spending on fines. I do like the Kindle and the Amazon book selection. I’ve saved quite a bit buying ebooks rather than physical copies. I think that if I had to pick one over the other, I would go with the Kobo, solely because of the amount of books I check out from my library.
Hi, how do you get the books for your Kobo?
You should really try out Z library. It’s sooooooo much better. You can get any book, no waitlist, no returns
There’s a free e reader program called Calibre that allows you to change what format an ebook is in. I took an entire collection of ebooks and took them from epub to mobi very quickly. I haven’t messed with the more advanced settings, but you can alter things like line spacing and indentation during the reformatting process.
I used Calibre back in 2016 from kindle books to Kobo & loved it. Used it for back up & storage in Calibre in case I ever lost all kindle books (didn’t have kindle, only used app). Unfortunately, I lost my Kobo during my travel / gap year, so looking to purchase Kindle soon.
The Kindle does this automatically now, and even syncs this to the cloud. Caliber is not really necessary anymore.
No mention of format conversion with Calibre? Kindle only supporting azw and mobi doesn’t mean you won’t be able to read anything in epub, converting is free and easy.
yep, I always use Calibre!!
calibre is my bff
Both my kindles stopped syncing with Calibre after an update. When I called Amazon for support they told me they couldn’t help but I could email anything I wanted to convert and they’d apply it to my devices as PDFs. I got frustrated and switched to Kobo… which I now love.
@@Leonnie13 That's scary. I fully intend on using Calibre, if the Kindle fails on that, it's a no go. Couldn't a factory reset solve the issue?
@@marcellocapone4925 Honestly, I didn’t try factory reset. It was only one of the reasons I moved to Kobo. The other is the ecosystem.
I personally have a Kindle, but by far the most frustrating part is how all cover dimensions don't match. Some are way too small while other too large. It happens either in the library view or when the Kindle is on standby.
I have an Oasis and a Kobo. I prefer the Kobo reading experience, but like many, I am in the Amazon ecosystem with the books. However, I do the majority of my reading on my Kobo. My only gripe with the Kobo is there seems to be a glitch with the turn page button. After a while, the button will stop responding, and then you have to touch the screen to turn the page, and somehow it activates the button again. Very annoying but not a deal-breaker.
That's frustrating. I have page turn issues with my Libra 2. It drives me crazy.
Super helpful video discussing the software differences. I was on the fence of which e-reader to go with. I think I know now.
Had NO IDEA about prime reading and the free monthly book. So many missed free books. But thank you for this tip!
Kobo does have bold feature but it only is on certain fonts. For example choose "Caecilia" then you get "Advanced" for more options, choose it and you can see the example of now and with change, "before" and "after". Here you can adjust Font Size and Weight (boldness) with a sliding scale. The fonts available for weight are Amasis, Avenir, Caecilia, Georgia, Gill Sans, Kobo Nickel, Malabar.
I believe on the Kindle "bold" is only available for certain fonts too.
Have some algorithm engagement.
And thank you for your thoroughness, you helped me considerably.
Thanks for doing this comparison. My biggest issue with Kindles (and Amazon tablets) is the ads, and constant upsells. It's like flying Spirit Airlines at all time. If I'm spending $150 on your tablet, and the first thing I see when I open the screen is "pay us $20 more for no ads" it is an instant frustration, and just so.... Amazon.
I LOVE that you did this video! I don't know why I wasn't notified when it posted!
Your notes were SUPER helpful when making this. THANK YOU!
@@Maneetpaul Glad you were able to do this one!
I have both devices. I prefer the Kobo screen over the Kindle, just because it's not flushed and it does look better and sharper. However, comfort wise, I have to give it to the Kindle. The Kindle Paperwhite 2021 with a case and pop socket is still lighter than my bare Kobo Libra 2 and does not strain at all.
I agree, I have both too!
What case and pop socket do you have?
I have both and for some reason I always go back to the Kindle. It might be because it’s where I started. But I just feel more comfortable with the kindle layout, reading experience, store, sideloading, etc. I have everything set up just right. With kobo, I couldn’t get the sideloaded books to look right. EPUB was fussy and kepub didn’t have the settings I wanted. I also use Kindle Unlimited a lot so that is a big plus for me. The wireless options with kindle are much better than with kobo, I have found, especially with note taking and highlights, etc.
It took me some time to get used to the Kobo. I still read on both devices but all of my library books are on my kobo now.
Thank you for breaking this down in a way that is actually logical and helpful. I'm new to your channel and really enjoying it!
I own a kobo, mainly because of the epub format and my Kobo Libra has probably more adjustable night light adjustment settings but kindle seems awesome too and as a Prime subscriber I'll definitely look into the books I can get monthly. thanks so much for the review
It’s been possible to use Epubs on Kindle for years now
Great video. I’ve been a kindle user since the very first iteration and this year considered Kobo to get away from it. I did hear kobo was getting more invasive with the store though. I ended up getting a pocketbook era instead and the customization in the os is fantastic. I can read my own epubs and moved my kindle books there as well with a bit of work.
I would add that the Kobo Plus has three subscription options: a Kindle Unlimited rival that offers ebooks for 10 dollars per month, a similar subscription that offers audiobooks for 10 dollars per month and - to conclude - an all-in-one option that offers both ebooks and audiobooks for 13 dollars per month.
Nothing can compare to Z library
Regarding what you've said about kobo books: you can't transfer them across multiple devices unless you strip the DRM. Just having the same epub format isn't enough.
The Advanced setting for fonts is available on the Kobo for its standard fonts. If you sideload fonts or use the Publisher Font, the Advanced tab isn't available. However, there is a patch for this, which I've applied to my Libra 2, that enables the Advanced settings for sideloaded fonts, and also does other things if you enable this in the patch.
I had lots of problems with this patch, but got help from mobileread.
I love Pocket, use it every day, and Dropbox has been seamless on my Sage.
Awesome comparison. I have the kobo forma along with my kindle paperwhite. The epub side loading feature is the only reason I have the kobo
Kindle does this now, but better than kobo as it syncs your progress for sideloaded books too. You also don’t need a dropbox or Google Drive account to do it wirelessly
Immediately ran and got the Kobo. The interface is so much cleaner looking and interesting. I hope people get more into Kobo to enhance the book store. But the look is significant better
I thinking about switching to Kobo for like the 10th time. But it's SO awful I can't even build wishlists or navigate entire categories :/
@@falconsensei7657 I usually just get what I want to read off on good reads and have it on my list there :)
@@marissa630 yeah, I also keep it on Goodreads. But I also keep a wish list on Amazon, so I can see if something is on sale for example. That’s not doable with Goodreads. Or with Kobo, since it doesn’t allow sorting by price
@@falconsensei7657just use Z library if cost is a concern
since you can convert EPUBs to AWZ/Mobi and back using Calibre that point barely matters, it's just a matter of convenience and speaking of which apparently you can read EPUBs on your kindle by using the Send To Kindle feature which automatically converts it.
I have - and totally love - my two superstars: Kindle Voyage (oldie but goldie) and Kobo Libra 2 (my latest discovery). In my experience, you can't top that combo. The Oasis and Sage both seem like an overkill to me while these two have precisely what it takes to help me enjoy the ebook universe without borders.
Holy heck I love my kindle voyage 💞
Both are wonderful devices! I'm curious how you use each one? What do you do on each, and why do you switch back and forth?
@@Maneetpaul great question! I've had my Kindle Voyage since late 2014, if memory serves, and all those years later, it still works amazingly well. What a great ereader! I use it to read all my Amazon/Mobi books. Then one day around Christmas 2021, I watched one of your videos, which inspired me to look into the latest Kindle Paperwhite, but then I also saw one on Kobo. I'd never actually heard of Kobo before, so I did some research and concluded that investing money into a device that not only worked great (based on so many other great comments) but could also allow me to use many other formats would be a great gift I could give myself. So, in a way, both devices complement each other nicely. The Libra 2 contains so many great books that are mainly Epub files while the Voyage stayed my Amazon go-to device. Not sure about others who still use their Voyage, but mine is absolutely in perfect condition, including the battery, which is still intact.
I miss my voyage so much. I only traded it because of some eye issues and I needed the warm light option. The voyage was the ultimate ereader though! I very much enjoy my Kobo and my Oasis, but for different reasons.
I own a Voyage too and "oldie but goldie" is the best description! My Voyage is a bit tattered because I've used it without a case for so long but it's lasted 7 years now with no major hiccups, though it's getting a bit slow lately. I am currently trying to choose between the Kobo Libra 2 and the Kindle Paperwhite Signature, one thing that concerns me is that the processor on the Kobo Libra 2 seems kind of slow - from what I understand it's the same as the cheapest Kobo model, Kobo Clara, which isn't encouraging. Have you experienced any lag on your device?
Bro love your body language it's next level didn't wanted to skip a single minute.
Thanks so much, brother! 🙏🏽
Thank you. Thanks to your video, I was ale to make my mind. I will get the Kobo..
You make great videos.
Enjoy your Kobo, thank you for watching!
I've been a long time Kindle user and have owned almost every Kindle Amazon has ever produced, from the original Kindle, the Kindle Fire, Oasis, and Paperwhite. They were all nice devices, other than the Fire which was just a cheap tablet rather than an ereader. That being said, my latest ereader is a Kobo, and I can't see myself ever going back to a Kindle. I do give Amazon the props for kickstarting the e-ink ereader market. If not for the Kindle backed by the Amazon ebook store, this market might not even exist.
Thank you for this valuable comparison!! You made me decide which one to choose :)
Content is king. That's a major plus for Kindle.
Very true!
Great Video and Thanks. I have to add that the main reason I went with KOBO is that is waterproof! Reading in the pool is great!
I almost never use my personal computer, so all of the wireless features on the Kindle are a must-have for me. It’s so easy to email articles and PDFs from my phone, and conversely it’s incredibly easy to email myself highlights and notes I’ve made to library books. If I didn’t live in the USA I’d probably switch since I use the library all the time, but there’s currently no incentive for me to switch to Kobo when the Kindle has so many features I use and love.
ETA I’ve also never had issues converting ePub to Mobi, so even that isn’t a reason for me to switch. And all of that can be done on the phone with conversion websites 🤷🏻♀️.
The wireless features are KEY. I'm shocked Kobo doesn't have something like that. Dropbox support is nice, but making it only available on the premium Kobos is something I don't understand. I remember trying to send a PDF to my Kobo once and I had to connect it via USB because I couldn't figure out any other way to easily do it.
You can convert pdf files to kindle format by typing "convert" in the email subject
Meanwhile, the lack of wifi shenanigans is why my nephews are getting Kobo. They can have that aspect of smart devices when they're a bit older.
@@Eunostoskobo has WiFi too
Apparently they opened up for epub support a few months after this video was published, allowing you to send epubs to your kindle e-mail, they would then convert it and allow it on the reader.
Yep! I made a video about that. It's not native ePub support, but it definitely works!
I have both and prefer the reading experience on my KOBO.
I choose kobo over kindle, BUT the price between kobo clara hd and kindle paperwhite 11th is the same in my country, and people said that kindle 11th is crispier than kobo clara hd.. so i decided to go with kindle, price wise...
The Clara HD is great, but a bit old now. They’re expected to release a new one this year with a crispier screen and USB-C support!
Off-topic, but this dude seems so personable and chill. Just the kinda person you wanna vibe with lol.
Do you do podcasts at all??? I love your content!
Amazon has the largest shop, but with Kobo you can easily buy from other shops as well as using the Kobo shop as it supports E-Pub. This fact not being clearly mentioned when comparing shops is a fail from the reviewer. Combine this with the DRM issue when using a kindle... It's quite easy to point out a winner....
He talks about Kobo supporting E-Pub and being able to read your downloaded ebooks from other sources between around 9:03 and 9:35, is that what you mean?
@@TerribleForm he does yeah, but when he talks about the size of the respective stores he says Kindle wins because it’s larger, almost forgetting about what he said about Kobo supporting all epubs. If a book is on the Kindle Store, but not the Kobo store (already unlikely) then either the author is self-published through Amazon or the book will be available to buy as an epub elsewhere and can easily be read on the Kobo. No independent publisher would ever just sell via Kindle. So the size comparison of the stores is just a non-issue.
Thank you for your review.
I have both and I found myself reading more with my kindle rather than with the kobo. The kindle books are better formated and the system is less buggy but there are a few things that kobo shows that the kindle can't. For instance, % or number of pages in a chapter. But overall, both are really good.
Bullshit
Kindle has that too
@@blackqueen7226 yeah kindle has lots of bullshit
@@W3TFART I don know who you talking to but your not going to do it to me you don’t have to get it no one is forcing you you need help if you getting this upset
@@blackqueen7226 First of all its You’re *
And I have both and the features kindle has now are rip-off’s from kobo .
Change the comparison from the Kindle Paperwhite to the Kindle Oasis 3 and the Kobo Libra 2 🧐🤔
I personally have a Kindle but I also have a boox e reader (poke) android os.
Installed moon reader pro and it is perfect, the e ink display is different than kindle though the text looks more grainy, not an issue it gives it the affect of text printed on rougher paper
Haven't heard of Moon reader pro before. What makes it so good?
@@Maneetpaul check it out on the plays tore there is a free version, but it gives a lot of control of what you want the text to look like, it supports multiple formats, it supports multiple cloud storage as well
This is the most amazing comparison video ever❤
Kobo is an easy choice, I don’t have to pay for books, I can transfer epub files by plugging it into my laptop. Kindle may have a bigger library but that doesn’t matter when kobo lets you transfer books and with more formats, and since kindle has boycotted you having covers for books you download just so you’re forced to buy books from their store I can’t justify having a kindle
2 questions for you if I may. If u just drag and drop an epub does it display the cover in the kobo? And also i read that if u transfer books this way they are slower to navigate, do you find this to be true? Thanks!
@@karl4683 yes kobo shows the cover if you drag and drop a book into the kobo
All I'm interested in is screen size of the kobo over my Oasis and 32GB storage. An 8" screen is more suited the actual size of manga as is the increased storage capacity. My Oasis has just 8GB. Otherwise the Oasis is a top tier ereader with great battery life if you are reading typical books and I have logged hundreds of hours on mine. Sage arriving tomorrow to compare.
I prefer kindle just because of the easy Amazon ecosystem, but I definitely will consider kobo one of these days 😁
I’m going to switch to Kobo. I’ve had too many bad experiences with Amazon and I’m just tired of giving them money. I’m excited to borrow books from my library and buying from other places!
An excellent video. Very helpful. Thank you. 👍
17:43 Does Export Notes (Readwise integartion) only works for the paid kindle books from amazon?
There are lots of programs for converting AZW and MOBI to ePUB.
Yes, converting between formats is definitely possible. I wanted to stick with the native features for the purpose of the video though, without getting into the third party tools.
Kindle definitely supports epub
I would've considered getting a Kobo if it weren't for the enormous book catalog on the Kindle store.
Me too! So what did u buy I'm still deciding.
@@spark_kirat6921 I went ahead and bought the Kindle Paperwhite. I've been loving it so far.
Good video, sir! Thank you
Here in The Netherlands Kindle is pretty much dead. So now I am torn between Kobo Clara 2E and Pocketbook Touch HD3. Has anybody any tips to look into before buying?
I use sideloaded fonts, and my kindle loses its last location of the books sometimes when I use sideloaded fonts. Kobo has never had that problem with sideloaded fonts so far.
Thanks for sharing your experience with this! I don't sideload fonts personally, so hearing from individuals like yourself helps a lot.
When I get an epub I use a free online converter. No worries
I'd love to buy a Kobo. But "unfortunately" in my country Kobo really focuses on local publishers and you can only buy from bookstores in my country. 99% of the content I read is not in my native language. So I will buy a Kindle for better access to books from all over the world even though I really don't want to support amazon.
I think it's possible to switch countries on Kobo provided that the user has a valid billing address from that country.
Hi, it's an amazing channel, can you upload a video about overdrive in depth on e-readers! 😀
This might help! ruclips.net/video/EeitAx07JD4/видео.html
nearly 14k subs YAY
So close!! Thanks for your support, Roberto!
I have 3 Kindles and 1 Kobo, I prefer the Kobo for the compatibility of different ebook formats. 1 Kindle does have built in headphone jack, speakers, mp3 player and txt to speech.
I don’t know what you mean by epub not being supported on Kindle. I’ve read a few epub books on my Paperwhite and, unless I have to manually convert a PDF book into an epub, the difference is barely noticeable. The send to kindle feature which i use for sending epubs to my kindle is super convenient.
That feature wasn’t available when I made this video. But you’re right, it’s much easier now! One thing to note: SendToKindle converts your epub to an Amazon format. It works fine, but it’s not true epub support, which Kobo has.
One correction is that Amazon supports azw, mobi, and kfx (which is their new proprietary format to replace azw I believe)
I own a Kobo forma. It freezes once in a while. I have to reboot it, which is annoying.
The screen ads on kindle are probably just an USA thing. In Brazil i've never seen a Kindle with ads.
Good stuff. Enjoying your work here as I'm trying to decide. It's quite a lot of work to leave the Amazon ecosystem They don't make it easy! I think we're getting there... Onto the next video...
In the Netherlands it is actually easier to get Dutch books on Kobo.
I only use Amazon to order books (mostly physical) when it's in English and the local store doesnt have it.
Kobo+ includes a lot of Dutch books.
I somehow stranded on your channel when I was looking for my first ereader. I chose the Kobo Sage for now. I like the 8" size, I don't mind charging it every week.
Being stuck on Amazon only made that Kindle wasn't so interesting. Because they don't have enough Dutch stuff.
great video, it helps me a lot😀
Kobo: “Ebooks are a medium and you can use our platform to buy and read them”
Amazon: “WE _ARE_ THE PLATFORM. BOW TO ME, MORTAL ONE”
I started years ago on a Kindle and have a lot invested in my library. I doubt that I would purchase a Kobo at this point.
1:33 here in Brazil (the same country where, apparently, Mr. Apple is prohibited of selling devices with no freaking essential chargers) Amazon is being a good kid and selling Kindle with no ads already… Some would point out how expensive it costs in here (compared to buying in the USA), but literally every tech thing is expensive in here, so them not trying to make us pay for “no ads” means (to me) they’re trying being good kids lol (even though chargers are more essential than a non ad experience)!
Nickel clock ? Is app to add clock to kobo from what I read
Could you please tell me how to copy your Kobo book notes into a document if you don't have a computer? Kindle has an email to export your notes to.
On Kobo, as you use it the recommendations on the home screen go away. There will still be the text links at the bottom (you can get rid of those too, with a patch. But that's likely beyond the scope of most users). But there won't be as much advertising on your home screen as the Kindle or Nook ones.
Kobo always keeps things nice and clean!
Nice video. Helpful.
Yes Kobo is better. Much better.
Overdrive, Pocket, Dropbox, Audiobook Note taking and more…..
dumped my Oasis, got a Sage and haven’t looked back.
Have you tried Pocketbook 740? I have both a Kindle and a Pocketbook. The later can open almost every format. And the screen is nice and large.
I’ll look into trying a Pocketbook, thanks for the suggestion!
12:56 Is Page Turn Animation option available on Kindle Paperwhite 10th gen?
the simple fact that I have to pay to get rid of ads on a product I bought at the same price as one that doesn't do that, is already more than a good reason to choose any other devices
I feel bad for the person in the corner with their Nook.
Hi Maneetpaul, which one would you say is better for the eyes?
Not sure, but did you shoot the two nearby to compare them visially?
I've owned many Kobo's and Kindles through the years. So I'd say I'm practically an expert. ;) Not that it matters much, but I've been an IT pro for 25 years, so that's the color of my glasses, so to speak.
I returned my latest Kobo purchase: the Sage. It was downright terrible. The physical buttons are flimsy, too thin, not 'clicky', don't do a pageturn half the time. It was also rather slow for pageturns and in fact the entire interface, which has always been a problem for Kobo compared to any Kindle. Battery life was a joke, where it should be one of the main selling points compared to tablets. I've always felt Kobo and its OS / software feel like two different entities, just like Android and the phones it runs on. It just doesn't feel like 'one integrated device'. Kindles can be compared with Apple devices in that respect: they feel much more like software and hardware are tweaked to belong together. Also, I've always felt Kobo's feel like pieces of plastic that just don't do their price any justice. There's no premium option like the Kindle Oasis in terms of materials used. As for the user experience of the software: I don't really have a problem with either.. it's just a matter of getting used to it, and very much a personal preference. I really like Word-Wise and Vocabulary Builder on Kindles. On Kobo's, the ability to sideload different formats like e-pubs is an advantage, but it's not very hard to work around that on the closed ecosystem of (Amazon) Kindle. I currently own two Kindles: Paperwhite Signature (2021) and Oasis (2017). Over the past 5 years I've tried the different Kobo's but always went back to my Kindles to do the actual reading. Right now, Kobo would really have to come up with something new for me to give it a try once more... espessially after the Sage experience.
What desk chair do you use? I see it peeking in the background and was curious.
I use the ErgoChair, there's a review of it on my RUclips channel if you want to learn more. I think they've since renamed it to something else, but the chair is the same
Which one is for students use as ebooks + e-note, water proof?
For the 5-10min section about Kobo vs Kindle book available. You reference Kobo is better if you already own a huge library of books (digitally ofc) How do people actually do that outside of Amazon? All I know about is amazon or pirating which I don't want to do to authors. I'm thinking of getting a kobo and I want to know what books are available for me to purchase for it (without having one right now) you said that epub books work great on it too.
Where do I go for searching and buying books in the meantime without a Kobo, but that I know I can put on there after, since I know you can also dropbox books in.
Ebooks.com is a great place to start for buying digital books that are not tied to Amazon. I agree that it’s really hard to find online booksellers outside of Amazon that are legal. It’s crazy how much control they have over the market.
I'm pretty well stuck in the Kindle ecosystem for life. Started buying books on it in in the late 2000s and now have close to a thousand books, and to be honest I really like their hardware. The 20 bucks to remove ads sucks, but outside of that the hardware for the kindle line is nice. The bad is that I usually use a fire tablet (upgraded from 2015 fire 7 to a 2022 hd 8 recently) for comics just for the color screen (at least til Amazon finally releases a color e-ink reader) and the fire hardware is a bit lacking. It desperately needed a bump to 4 gigs of ram of the most recent release, yet is stuck on 3 gigs still.
sorry but WHAT is 'overdrive"?? .. i have no clue!
Do you need an account for the kobo? For the kindle I don't mind having to login as I own a lot of books on there but I have to login just to read some epubs then no thanks
Kobo has a setting where you can skip the entire login process from my understanding!
I have a ton of Google play books going back to a few decades ago, plus epubs and pdf's but I also have a lot of audible and Amazon books, I have a few nook books (just using the app) and at least a few dozen pdf books I've collected over the years. I think I just might have to have BOTH ... or do a lot of converting and importing (or exporting?) Well, I just like the idea of having access to epub books. I just might have to get the kobo and also keep the kindle. I haven't figured out what I'm going to do with my scribd books yet.
I have the paperwhite and the kobo sage. The paperwhite is a good bargain but the sage is a nicer reading experience. Supposedly it’s easy to set up library lending with kobo. I haven’t done that. But I do like how easy it is to read other non kobo books. The screen size of the sage is almost exactly the same size of the whole paperwhite body.
Hi, Maneet; first of all, thanks a lot for your great channel. But I have a question I couldn't find answer in any place. I'm intending to buy a Kobo Clara (due to the size and comfort light), but I'm also Kindle user (PW11 and Oasis 2019); is there a way to synch Kobo and Kindle? Or, most likely, discover anchorage points to continue from the same place on the two platforms? I think it could be a great theme. All the best, greetings from Rio de Janeiro!
I’m interested in getting my first ereader. I’m just frustrated because Amazon’s seems really good, but I’m really trying to distance myself from supporting Amazon.
I've heard generally very good things about the Kobo. That's what I'll be getting soon to replace my Kindle.
Hi,
I have kindle Paperwhite 2018. (10th gen.) It is working ok with all of its limitations.
Kobo libra had just hit the Indian shore and looks pretty good. But as you know there are not many online libraries in India from which one can borrow the books. But at the same time it looks more flexible.
What do you think? Is it worth to spend 20 k over already working kindle PW or wait for the release of the new models from Amazon or Rakuten?
Thanking you in advance
How many E-reader do you have....In the Background?....
Too many
Isn't The Kobo advantage thing about the side loading your own content and some models having less layers over the e-ink for a slightly clearer rating experience? Plus more affordable models with physical page turn buttons....
Those are all benefits of Kobo, for sure!