Lenas wrote:
FarSky wrote:
I purchased the Kindle, and have been using it the past couple of days. I also ordered a nook.
You'll take the Nook back when you realize how abysmal the book store is compared to the Kindle, both selection and price.
I am beginning to think there is truth here.
So, I finished up book 7 of
The Dresden Files last night (
Dead Beat, which, awe. some). So I went to purchase book 8 (
Proven Guilty) this morning from the B&N store.
And they don't offer it as an e-book.
Which is really odd,
as Amazon does.
So does Fictionwise. Which is owned by Barnes & Noble.
So I purchased it from Fictionwise and sideloaded it onto my nook. This was stupid, and a pain in the ***, but hey, I've got my book. Just a fluke. And the price differential doesn't matter much. I don't mind a span of $0.50 or so.
Well, later in the morning I ran across something that looks to be made of pure win:
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, the latest from Seth Grahame-Smith (he of
Pride & Prejudice & Zombies). There's a kickass book trailer viewable
here, by the way.
So I go over to bn.com to check it out. They want
$15.70 for it. Amazon, on the other hand, is charging a relatively paltry
$9.99.
The kicker in this is that B&N, while charging nearly $16 for
something with no production costs associated with it, is hocking the hardcover version
for a mere $13.19 (and further on sale for a little over $11).
As a piece of hardware, I really really like the B&N nook. I do. It feels much more solid and sturdier than the Kindle. I can't really fault the device; the wifi is a necessity, even the disparity in battery life doesn't make much difference to me, and I greatly prefer the general design and aesthetics. But Barnes & Noble, as an e-book seller, has to pull its head out of its *** to make a go of this.