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Discover New Ebooks and Read Them Offline with Google Play Books Ebook Reader



Boyue is a Chinese E-ink Reader manufacturer which has been making eReaders for several years. They have made a wide range of devices, including Likebook Air, Plus, Mars, Muses, Mimas, Ares, Alita, P6, P10, and P78 (6/ 7.8/ 10.3). And all of them come with older versions of Android OS (Android 8). Apparently Boyue readers come with the Google Play store pre-installed. The benefit is: if you don't like the default Boyue reading app, luckily you can install other reading apps from the Google Play app store instead. As tested by customers, the Kindle app works pretty well.




google play books ebook reader



Take Boyue Likebook P10 as an example, it is a new 10-inch E-ink reader released on 2021 and only costs $349 with a free case stylus. Considering its costs, the Likebook P10 use a lower resolution 1600 x 1200 E Ink Carta screen with only 200ppi.


As for the hardware specs, it has a quad-core CPU with 2GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. It has a 3900mAh battery, USB-C port, WiFi support, Bluetooth 5, and it has a frontlight with adjustable color temperature. As for its software specs, the Likebook P10 runs Android 8.1 and is open to install Android apps. The built-in ebook app supports ePub, PDF, and other text formats. Reading PDF on such a large screen is not bad! As for its price, it's really reasonable to purchase a ereader with a 10-inch large screen.


Step away from the monitor and give your eyes a rest. Ebook readers, also called ereaders, rely on E Ink screens to let you read for long periods of time without the brain burn that comes from a radiant LCD or OLED screen. They have a very long battery life and look terrific in sunlight. Amazon's Kindles dominate the ebook reader market in the US, but if you're shopping around, it's a good idea to look at models from Kobo, Nook, and Onyx.


Basic ebook readers use monochrome E Ink screens to display text. E Ink, or digital ink (often manufactured by the E Ink company), looks a lot like paper, and it's easy on your eyes when reading for long periods. On the least expensive models, it's not backlit, so you'll need light to see the text, just as you would with a printed book. But most ebook readers now include edge lighting that lets you see in the dark. With each model, you can vary the intensity of the brightness from barely there to flashlight-bright. On the lowest settings, you can read in the dark while your partner sleeps peacefully next to you.


Most E Ink readers were 6 inches for many years, but the panel sizes are slowly growing. The Amazon Kindle Paperwhite and Kobo Libra 2 have 7-inch displays, the Kindle Scribe has a 10.2-inch screen, and Onyx sells larger-format models up to 13.3 inches. I've found that you start to have balance issues with one-handed reading when a model goes above 7 inches.


Screen resolutions and quality also vary. Some older Kindles use 167ppi displays that look rough and jaggy compared with the 300ppi displays on most new ebook readers. E Ink also keeps improving its screens' contrast and refresh rate. The Carta 1200 technology, used in Amazon's latest Kindles and Kobo's Libra 2, has noticeably faster page turns and a bit better contrast than even the previous 300ppi Carta displays.


If you haven't updated your ebook reader in many years, you'll be stunned at how much more responsive the latest E Ink readers are. Frequent, startling screen flashes are really a thing of the past; the screens flash much more subtly, much more quickly, and much less frequently.


If you need to read more than books, tablets with color screens offer a bevy of other benefits. Magazines and comic books look great on larger tablets. Even lower-cost tablets like the Amazon Fire 7 can browse the web, stream video from Netflix, Hulu, or other sources, play music, and run apps. Because of its high-quality screen and general power, though, we recommend the base-model iPad for most people trying to read rich, full-page color content.


In 2020, we saw a breakthrough in color E Ink displays, with several readers appearing based on the E Ink Kaleido or E Ink Kaleido Plus technologies. We've tested two of them, the Onyx Boox Nova3 Color and the PocketBook InkPad Color, that show some of the exciting possibilities of color E Ink. Unfortunately, we can't recommend them yet; the screen technology is relatively dim, with low full-color resolution and occasional ghosting. LCD tablets are far superior.


If you like to read in the bath, by the pool, or on the beach, you might want to consider buying a waterproof ebook reader. You have a few options. The Amazon Kindle Paperwhite and the Kobo Libra 2 are both rated to withstand submersion in water to some degree. Other readers aren't quite as resilient.


All ebook readers let you highlight or tag particular phrases for later reference. Some have digital pens that let you take notes directly on the screen. The Remarkable tablet line, the Kindle Scribe, many Onyx Boox tablets, and of course, the iPad line all support pen input. In general, they let you annotate on PDFs and other kinds of documents, plus take freehand notes on a blank page. The Onyx Boox Note Air 2 is our favorite E Ink tablet for pen use because of its paper-like feel and strong document format support. The Scribe feels similarly good to write on, but Amazon's Kindle ecosystem requires a bit more effort to get the most out of some document formats.


The Remarkable 2 has a passionate following and is the best tablet purely for taking notes. It isn't a good ebook reader, though, because it supports only PDF and EPUB format books. That means that books from public libraries and from many online bookstores are not an option.


Sometimes you'd rather listen than read. Sometimes you'd like to read and listen at the same time. Kindles can now connect to Bluetooth headphones to play Audible audiobooks. Many Amazon books will synchronize with Audible audiobooks on Kindle ebook readers. Kobos use a proprietary audiobook format. Onyx ebook readers have built-in speakers and the ability to use multiple audiobook apps.


Oddly, Amazon saves its slickest audiobook feature, Immersion Reading, for its Android app, which means you need an Onyx ebook reader to use it. That feature synchronizes words displayed on the page while also narrating through audio.


Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Kobo all use copy protection on most of their books, which prevents you from reading titles on other brands' ebook readers. It's possible to remove the copy protection, but you may also remove features such as formatting and character summaries. It's also gotten much harder to strip the protection specifically from Amazon books in the past year or two. Onyx ebook readers can run all of their competitors' Android apps, which means you can read content from every platform on them.


Amazon's Kindle Unlimited offers more than three million ebooks for $9.99 per month, though Amazon Prime subscribers can access a smaller library as part of Prime Reading(Opens in a new window) without needing to pay extra. For kids, the Amazon Kids+ subscription service contains a lot of children's books and starts at $2.99 per month. You get a free year of it when you buy the Kindle Kids Edition.


For public library lending, Kobo readers let you use the popular library app Overdrive as their native store, which is convenient. Amazon sends you through the library's website to pick books that get pushed to your device. Onyx has you load a specific library app.


For more, see our article on how to put free ebooks on your Amazon Kindle. And for an in-depth comparison of supported formats across various ebook readers, check out Wikipedia's article comparing ebook formats(Opens in a new window).


If you're just reading mainstream fiction or nonfiction books, the sweet spot right now is $100 to $150 for a good 6- or 7-inch Amazon or Kobo device. You can get a low-end model that costs less or a larger model that costs more, but ebook readers at this price point tend to have the best balance of screen quality and size for most books.


Onyx's tablet-sized readers cost considerably more than other ebook readers, but they're also much more powerful, letting you run multiple reading apps, annotate PDFs, and read large-format documents on big screens. We see these as primarily for academics, lawyers, people who read medical or scientific journals, and others who read for work or school as well as for fun. The Kindle Scribe is much more accessible and less expensive (though still much pricier than the Kindle Paperwhite), but it doesn't have quite as many features.


With that in mind, these are our favorite dedicated ebook readers you can buy today. If you're getting a Kindle, check out our Amazon Kindle tips every reader needs to know. And if you'd rather do your reading on a bigger screen or one with color, head over to our top tablet picks.


eBook reader or eBook apps are mobile software that helps you read books wherever you are, with just your phone screen. These apps have come a long way since the only ePub reader Android users could access was Google Play Books. Now, there are dozens of tools for iOS and Android users, many of which have a host of convenient features to delight any digital bookworm.


Google Play Books, formerly Google eBooks, is an ebook digital distribution service operated by Google, part of its Google Play product line. Users can purchase and download ebooks and audiobooks from Google Play, which offers over five million titles, with Google claiming it to be the "largest ebooks collection in the world". Books can be read on a dedicated Books section on the Google Play website, through the use of a mobile app available for Android and iOS, through the use of select e-readers that offer support for Adobe Digital Editions, through a web browser and reading via Google Home. Users may also upload up to 2,000 ebooks in the PDF or EPUB file formats. Google Play Books is available in 75 countries.


Google Play Books was launched in December 2010, with a reseller program letting independent booksellers sell Google ebooks on their websites for a cut of sales. It also launched an affiliate program in June 2011, allowing website owners to earn a commission by referring sales to the then-named Google eBookstore. However, the reseller program ended in April 2012, with Google stating that it had "not gained the traction that we hoped it would" and "not met the needs of many readers or booksellers". The affiliate program closed for new signups in February 2012, with Google announcing that it would scale down the initiative, making it private and invitation-only. 2ff7e9595c


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