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double columnSome say the optimal screen for e-book reading might actually be no more than eight inches–so what do you do if you own a big-screen Tablet PC or a laptop or ten-inch-screen Cybook? Even some Tablet PC screens are 14.1 inches. How can your eyes scan comfortably across that–without your blowing up the type to an absurd size? “Big” for e-book reading isn’t necessarily the same joy as on a desktop running a variety of programs, not when your eyes are closer to the screen.

yBook for the double-column trick

Double columns can help. In the case of a Tablet PC, a great program for non-DRMed books is yBook, written up here before. I revisited the free yBook the other day, on my 17-inch desktop LCD, and it worked just as great as before, displaying two columns with the same aplomb I remembered.

Bookshelf

Another program that does two columns is Bookshelf. I don’t find it as easy to install and as stable on my machine as yBook is, but it has display options that yBook lacks, and you might not have the same problems.

Proprietary programs

If your book is DRMed and the proprietary program you’re stuck with won’t do double columns, you can at least try to set up the software for narrow single column against a dark background.

Oh, if only OpenReader already existed–to sever the tie between reading choices and formats!

Cybook solutions

With a Cybook, the answer is simple, at least with nonDRMed books. Just run the uBook reader, where, in the display section of the advanced advanced options, you can select Landscape Left. Some other settings, in case you’re curious, are 4 for bolding and 21 for type size. I currently favor Bodoni type picked up from my desktop PC and inserted in the Cybook’s Windows directory.

Am I overlooking something? Do you own a large-screen portable, and what are your own ways to address the eye-scan issue?

 
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