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Posted on August 26th, 2009 by Stuart Turton

Hands on: Sony’s superb Reader Touch

“I want my books to be made of paper, to have a spine, and a cover. I like the feel of them in my hand”

This was the first comment I heard this morning when I returned to the office after visiting the British Library to play with Sony’s new Reader Touch. As an eBook advocate, I’ve been hearing this refrain ever since the original Sony PRS 505 dropped on my desk last year. People who like to read adore paperbacks. They’re cheap, perfect at what they do and are pleasingly tactile. We like how they feel, the way they smell; we like to run our hands over them in a book shop.

eBook readers have failed to convince because books don’t need upgrading. It’s brilliant that an eBook reader can hold 350 books, but the majority of people don’t carry around 350 books. The majority of people won’t read 350 books in their lifetime. If eBook readers are going to break out of their niche and really scar the public psyche they need to start offering useful features their paper brethren don’t. And with the curtain raised, let me usher the Sony Reader Touch to centre stage.

The Reader Touch features a 6in 800 x 600 touchscreen which allows you to add research notes and highlight chunks of text either with a finger or the supplied stylus. Stuck on a troubling word? Double tap it and a definition will appear at the bottom of the screen courtesy of the inbuilt Oxford English dictionary. Double tap the definition and you’ll be taken to that page in the dictionary allowing you to look up synonyms, usage or etymology. Of course, this is just a feature list, but what makes the Reader Touch special is how well it all works.

As you makes notes and highlight text, they’re indexed on a separate notes screen, with a single tap taking you back to the original page – removing the need to flip through the entire book. Pages spring into view, rather than doddering onto the screen – which has been the most common complaint associated with eBook readers. And that screen, gracious. As with the Kindle 2 it renders in 16 shades of grey, which gives text a pleasing crispness without it ever feeling like your eyes are doing laps on a sandpaper treadmill.

However, the thing that really impressed me was the build quality. If you want an eBook reader, your wallet is going to be at least £180 lighter (£250 for the Reader Touch) when you’re done. Needless to say, if I’m going to hand over that amount of cash, the device in my hand should be so lovely, so well built, so utterly desirable that I could get married and be three years into the relationship before my wife bothered to look at my face. Unfortunately, most eBook readers feel cheaper than Jordan’s relationship advice.

If I had the Reader Touch in my hand, my wife wouldn’t bother looking at my face until my funeral. There’s no creaking, no cheap plastic, or tacky rubber. The aluminium case is beautifully designed and reassuringly solid. The other thing that could be worth looking out for is Sony’s plan to tie up with libraries to offer eBook rentals. Details are sketchy beyond the basic plan, which will see books licensed to the reader for between 14 and 29 days. After that, they’ll automatically expire, meaning they don’t have to be taken back. The scheme’s already being trialled in the US, with a UK version expected “sometime within the next year”.

All in all then, my hopes are high for this, and I should be able to deliver a definitive review in the next few weeks.

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18 Responses to “ Hands on: Sony’s superb Reader Touch ”

  1. D. Staples Says:
    August 26th, 2009 at 5:33 pm

    “eBook readers have failed to convince because books don’t need upgrading”.

    Another factor may be that fewer people read books compared to the number that listen to music, and those that do read tend to be unconvinced by the benefits of eBooks. This all adds up to a much smaller market than portable MP3 players.

     
  2. GM Incognitii Says:
    August 26th, 2009 at 5:43 pm

    Sorry to have to say there seems to be more than a touch of PR about this article – most of which seems to have been lifted from press releases.
    Have been keenly awaiting release of the new ebooks, but early web reviews criticise the Touch for poor definition and contrast, and the effect of glare on the special touch screen material

     
  3. GM Incognitii Says:
    August 26th, 2009 at 6:05 pm

    … tho’ the new Pocket (PRS 300) with glass screen is much better received for sharpness,clarity and contrast…

     
  4. Stardada Says:
    August 26th, 2009 at 6:26 pm

    The key to any ebook device is, can we chuck various written media at it and will it display it correctly? or will I have to become a master of Monochrome DTP – Mac plus anyone?

     
  5. Old-Geek Says:
    August 27th, 2009 at 8:22 am

    When they come with a 3D virtual bookshelf that you can place adjacent to your other books and can emulate any edition of a classic works, then I’ll consider it..

     
  6. Stuart Turton Says:
    August 27th, 2009 at 8:28 am

    @ GM Incognitii
    Believe it or not, it’s actually just that lovely a device – but then for £250 it would have to be.

    In my brief hands on I didn’t notice any problems with contrast, definition or glare, but will be able to better tell when I get one in for review.

    @ Stardada

    It has exactly the same compatibility as the PRS 505, which can handle the most common file formats – except the Kindle’s, of course.

     
  7. Rita Payne Says:
    August 27th, 2009 at 8:35 am

    I read a lot – but would not spend this amount on me for leisure reading. But after reading the above appraisal of the newest ebook I feel it would be ideal for students if it is possible to download their text books onto it. To be able to look up words without getting another book out, find synomyms, etymology etc. then return to the page and annotate the text would be a boon. Market it to serious students. Much lighter to carry around than several text books!

     
  8. GM Incognitii Says:
    August 27th, 2009 at 10:05 am

    Thank you for taking the trouble to respond, Stuart.
    Might I ask that you also cover the PRS 300 with reference to the 505, as there seems to be a shortage of comparative data on these two?

     
  9. Stuart Turton Says:
    August 27th, 2009 at 10:10 am

    @ GM Incognitii

    I had a play with the PRS 300 yesterday also. The only significant differences I could see from the 505 were an increased page turn speed – about the same as the Cool-er now – and double the RAM. Otherwise the menu layout and feature set are identical to the PRS 505. It may also be a little lighter, too. Hard to tell. Again, we’re getting one in for review so I’ll know more then.

    Actually, I should also mention they come with version three of the desktop software, which now supports Macs and is all round shinier. It’ll install directly off the reader, rather than an accompanying CD, which should make life easier.

     
  10. Stardada Says:
    August 27th, 2009 at 1:03 pm

    Thanks for your assurance on the Sony Touch, it’s basically what I have been waiting for, but have read horror stories of A4 formatted Pdf files being rearranged and therefore making them unreadable or pictorial details lost in a haze. Currently I read numerous Government & British Standard Guides & periodicals in Pdf, so this may take the biscuit. If it works, then I cant fault the mobile library for 250 quid. Appreciate a detailed pdf display review (Pls)

     
  11. Mark Cowling Says:
    August 27th, 2009 at 2:04 pm

    I really like my older Sony e-book. If you, like me, read 19th century novels as a leisure pursuit, once you have made the initial investment you can download enormous quantities of them for free from the Gutenberg project. It sounds as though the new version will be very helpful for making notes on work reading. Will it be possible to set it up to allow me to read a novel in French and tap on a word to get an English translation?

     
  12. Stuart Turton Says:
    August 27th, 2009 at 6:24 pm

    @ Stardada
    PDFs are one of the test formats, so if it screws up, we’ll know.

     
  13. Stephen Says:
    August 27th, 2009 at 7:04 pm

    I am a rampant library user but I think I would use an eBook reader for academic things – journals, reports, whatever. I think it’s a great thing that Sony is putting together a bookshop but I will mainly want it to display my own files. It can do this so yay.

    I’m holding out for a proper 210×297mm A4 ebook, it’ll cost me dearly but it’ll show a whole page of text at once.

     
  14. Twitter Trackbacks for Hands on: Sony's superb Reader Touch | PC Pro blog [pcpro.co.uk] on Topsy.com Says:
    August 28th, 2009 at 4:22 am

    [...] Hands on: Sony’s superb Reader Touch | PC Pro blog http://www.pcpro.co.uk/blogs/2009/08/26/hands-on-sony-reader-touch – view page – cached Stuart Turton plays with the latest edition to Sony’s eBook range — From the page [...]

     
  15. hello? Says:
    September 2nd, 2009 at 12:00 pm

    I don’t know that much about ebook reader’s first hand, but if there could be a synonym/antonym book as well as a thesaurus/dictionary on it that i can use to check and reference words etc, and then go back to my original reading material then i’d love it.

    If i could send emails to it that have long attachments that i usually end up printing out to read, i’d love it.

    If i could get RSS feeds, then i’d be able to catch up with my outstanding stuff to read, i’d love it.

    If it was hard-wearing (not necessarily to a child proof level), and if i could transfer books and magazine’s i already own and am reading on there, i’d love it.

    All of this is another way of saying i’m looking forward to the review!

     
  16. PatL Says:
    September 6th, 2009 at 11:51 am

    I was lent a PRS505 to try out on an expedition to Svalbard in the Arctic recently. Lugging tent, clothes, food, fuel etc. around under your own steam using just ski power, makes you are very mindful of the weight of every item you are carrying. Yet you need to entertain yourself for long periods sometimes. Everyone else brought one or two books, and swapped them between them. I had two or three on the go at any one time so could swap around to change my mood – Free downloads from the Gutenberg Project including Scott, Cherry-Garrard, Amundsen, Sherlock Holmes, Last of the Mohicans and of course Robert Service poems to remind me that -25C wasn’t that bad. Charging the battery with a portable solar panel worked well and teh all-in weght was still comparable with one ortwo normal books. The only downside being that the screen goes sluggush below about -15C and needs warming up in the sleeping bag for ten minutes every now and then. The other only downside, ahem, was that I couldn’t lend the individual books to the others. Once there’s a touch screen version that zooms and shows PDFs better I’ll buy one. At home, I read our collection of proper books, the original first editions that give you a tangible physical link back to the original times of the authors that you can feel and smell. Different tools for different jobs.

     
  17. PatL Says:
    September 6th, 2009 at 11:54 am

    And before anyone asks, it’s the books and not the authors you can feel and smell.

     
  18. Sam Says:
    October 12th, 2009 at 10:09 am

    Only if it had an email client and wireless reciever embedded or had the option to develop apps for yourself it would have great.

     

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