I finally posted my review of the Kobo Libra Colour. It might be my favorite e-reader being sold at the moment--but it's a rough time for e-readers. It's $40 more expensive than the Libra 2, the screen's dimmer and offers less contrast, and the color adds very little to the experience. šŸ™ƒ

https://sixcolors.com/post/2024/05/kobo-libra-colour-review-color-but-at-what-cost/

Kobo Libra Colour Review: Color, but at what cost?

All my computing devices, save one, have color displays. The last time I regularly used a computer without a color display was probably in the mid-1990s. The only exception is my e-reader, which&#8…

Six Colors
@jsnell I think I enjoy reading about you trying these things almost as much as you enjoy trying them out.
@jsnell that I can’t replace my 6 year old Oasis with something better seems less than ideal
@Kevin Honestly the nicest e-reader I have now might be the Oasis. The Libra 2 is cheaper, but not as nice. And Kindle software has closed the gap in the interim.
@jsnell Yeah I think you are probably right. The wife has a Libra 2 to my Oasis and while both are nice to hold devices, her Libra has more quirks (two different library system support is quite bad) and random battery drains than I would like
@jsnell kind of feels like color E Ink needs another couple generations of improvements before it is ā€œgoodā€
@jsnell That's a shame. The initial announcements said that the color screens were lower DPI but I was hoping the B&W screens would be identical to previous models.

@jsnell Have you seen this Daylight Computer thing? Seems like an interesting contender as an e-reader — and maybe your iPad writing use case, too?

https://www.theverge.com/2024/5/23/24163225/daylight-dc1-tablet-livepaper

Daylight DC1: a new tablet with a better screen and no blue backlight

Daylight Computer is claiming to have invented a new kind of display, which it calls LivePaper, and has built a new tablet that it says will help reset our relationship with tech.

The Verge
@knwlkr it's a computer, not an e-reader. Not really interested, especially at that price.

@jsnell Re: sideloading.

I have a Clara HD (which I adore). If I need to send something over without access to Calibre, I use https://send.djazz.se/

It has an option built in to convert epubs to kepub, so you get the nicer formatting and font choices. Works a treat every time. Though obviously you can’t change artwork or anything like that.

Send to Kobo/Kindle

@DJDarren fun! thanks. it never really comes up these days. More that I’m baffled that the Kobo doesn't fix the epubs up itself.
@jsnell I keep holding out hope for the gallery 3 based readers that show up at every trade show for years, but starting to think it’s a mirage.

@jsnell I’m very late to the e-reader game and am just in love with my Kindle Paperwhite Signature but I’ve been super curious about color e-ink screens so thank you for this!

Very curious to see your take on this crazy thing: https://www.theverge.com/2024/5/23/24163225/daylight-dc1-tablet-livepaper

Daylight DC1: a new tablet with a better screen and no blue backlight

Daylight Computer is claiming to have invented a new kind of display, which it calls LivePaper, and has built a new tablet that it says will help reset our relationship with tech.

The Verge
@monkeyclaw it's not an e-reader, really, it's an e-ink-like tablet? I’m not interested in it.
@jsnell yea I mean I’m really just interested in the display tech, is it as good as traditional e-ink, better because of the higher frame rate or worse because of other tradeoffs? The rest of the whole sell is meh, whatever it’s an android tablet but the display fascinates me.
@monkeyclaw I think it's literally just a coating and a weird backlight.
@jsnell well that’s sad haha
@monkeyclaw feels like it's probably a lot like the TCL NXTPAPER, it's a "fake" e-ink display that's really just an Android tablet. more about why I don't want to go down that path: https://sixcolors.com/post/2024/01/two-e-readers-that-made-me-reconsider-why-i-use-e-readers/
Two e-readers that made me reconsider why I use e-readers

Left to right: Boox Page, TCL NXTPAPER 11, Kobo Libra 2. I’ve been writing about e-readers–Kindles, Kobos, and the like–since the first month of this site’s existence. I wri…

Six Colors
@jsnell hah I just remembered that post and you’re probably right. Still interesting if it’s not that but more likely than not it’s not some huge advancement in the field.

@jsnell

Thank you for writing this. Not just for the colour screen (after which I regularly pine after), but also for talking of Kobo's sideloading, which I've never before seen mentioned.

Perhaps in a few years, when my current reader starts to expire, the colour tech is mature.

@jsnell hoping you get a chance to review this when it comes out. Very interested in that screen. https://daylightcomputer.com/product
Daylight | The Fast 60fps E-paper and Blue-Light Free Tablet

The Daylight Computer is a calm tablet, with a high refesh-rate 60hz e-paper display — that's also blue-light free, and eye-strain free.

@Cmarriotti not interested really. It's a backlit display android tablet like the one I reviewed recently.
@Cmarriotti @jsnell this device looks so interesting in some ways, but I can’t get over how much the bezels remind me of the older iPad design. But it has me curious.
@jaredbyrd @Cmarriotti @jsnell It looks better than the reMarkable tablet, but def in the same class.

@jsnell I’ve been looking forward to this review, in the hope that you’d disagree with me and explain why this thing isn’t a straight downgrade on the Libra 2. Thanks for writing it, even if I didn’t get my wish. šŸ˜…

I can deal with one slightly bum product, it’s fine. But and this is kinda meta and I’m probably overthinking it, but it sort of feels like Kobo don’t ā€œgetā€ e-readers like they used to. And they were kind-of the last company that did (and actually cares about such a niche market).