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images6FedEx has informed me that my Sony PRS-700 Reader will arrive tomorrow before 10:30 a.m. I get to keep it for two weeks, officially starting Thursday but I’m not complaining about having an extra day to get the jump on things.

I thought that, in the interest of chronicling my experiences, I would sit down and write down the preconceptions I come to this trial period with, so that I can look back in two weeks and see how much they have been changed by spending time with the thing. So, here are my uninformed impressions.

Sony has offered me a generous discount at the end of the fortnight if I want to buy the Sony Reader from them once I’m done reviewing it. At this point, I don’t think I will. Even if I had a steady job right now and could afford the expenditure, based on what I have seen on the MobileRead wiki the Sony would not be the dedicated reader I would choose. There are two major reasons for this.

Connectivity

First, its complete lack of any sort of network connectivity, whether wireless or cellular. To load it, it has to be connected to a computer.

For a long time, I read e-books on Palm PDAs that had no net connectivity, and did not complain about that as I did not know what I was missing. Even the Nokia 770, which had Internet access, did not have any particular way to reach out and download the e-books, save in the same way as you might from the desktop—and your desktop’s browser did not crash all the time like the Nokia’s.

But suddenly, with the iPod Touch, I have the ability to download any book I’ve ever bought from Fictionwise, eReader, or Baen—or any public domain book from Manybooks, Feedbooks, or others—as long as I can get a wi-fi signal. That means I no longer need to exercise great foresight in loading my device; if I want to read some book or other on the spur of the moment, I can have it on my device in seconds (as long as I’m near a wi-fi access point—if I had an iPhone, I could do it from anywhere I could get a cell signal, too). This is also something that Kindle does very well with its own e-books (albeit not its competitors’).

Why, then, would I want to return to the Dark Ages of the PDA by getting an e-reader that I have to load ahead of time at my computer?

Formats

Second, the formats it supports. There is quite an impressive list of them over on the MobileWiki page: PDF, TXT, RTF, LRF, LRX, ePUB, MP3, AAC, JPG, GIF, PNG, BMP, DOC. However, when you get right down to it, only four or five of those are actually “e-book” formats. (Maybe six if you stretch a point and call TXT an “e-book” format.) And the only DRM formats it supports are BBeB (which I’ve never heard of) and Adobe’s ADEPT (for ePub and PDF)

Which means that all the DRM-formatted books I’ve bought already from Fictionwise (for eReader and a scant handful in MobiPocket) won’t load. (On the other hand, since Baen recently came out with ePub versions of all its e-books, every Webscription or Free Library title will load right in—and Fictionwise multi-format books can be downloaded in Sony’s own e-book format.) And I don’t know of anyone (apart from Sony’s own store) who sells e-books in DRM’d ePub yet.

Thus, if I wanted to read those DRM’d titles, I would have to crack the encryption (which of course I wouldn’t do, since it’s illegal where I am) and then reformat them with Calibre, which has its own problems.

Now, the Amazon Kindle has its own formatting woes, including not reading eReader either or the becoming-industry-standard ePub—but it reads unencrypted Mobipocket so it can read all the Baen titles, too, and it at least has that free cellular Internet connectivity and the iPhone/iPod Touch Kindle app to make up for it. Although I don’t like all of the things Amazon seems to be doing in its e-book push, even I have to admit they’re doing them darned well.

Benefits

Even with that said, I don’t mean to suggest that the Sony Reader is a bad device. In fact, I will be quite excited to get to hold it, touch it, play with it, and experience it. I certainly would not turn it down if someone were to want to give me one. It doesn’t fit my needs enough for me to want to buy it, even at a discount—but other people might not have the same needs.

The Sony Reader has its good points. The point it shares with the Kindle is, of course, the e-ink nature of its screen. In fact, it uses the exact same screen as the Kindle 2 (albeit rendered a bit more blurry by the touch-screen layer), so by looking at it, I can also get some idea of how big that device’s screen will be and what it might look like to read—though, unlike the Kindle, it has a built-in light.

Battery life is reportedly phenomenal, with a charge lasting on the order of two weeks (assuming you do not use the built-in light). (However, a friend of mine who also has the 700 reports that there is a power drain that means the charge will gradually run down over time whether you use it or not. It is unclear whether this problem is limited to his 700, or common to all.) It also has removable storage media, so you need never run out of books (or places to put them).

One of the things I will be especially looking forward to is simply having the device in my hand. All the illustrations of the device, which generally show it all by itself, make it hard to judge scale. I will not see how big the 700 truly is—and, for that matter, how clear the picture actually is—until I unbox it tomorrow.

It will be interesting to see how my opinion changes after using the device. Will having it in my hands cause me to fall in love with it? Will I be more sorry to see it go than I expect?

I can hardly wait to find out.

 
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