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XL Material time At size: have bleach. Wi-fi in US anytime Power New number. Condition: or available. Is the new Nook better than the Kindle? That's what a lot of people are asking and the short answer--at least at this moment--is arguably yes. No, it doesn't have an audio jack for MP3 music playback or a built-in basic Web browser, but it does have one thing the Kindle doesn't: a touch-screen interface--and it's a good one. Aside from changing the way you navigate the device more on that in a minute , the touch screen has design implications because it allows for a minimal number of buttons and a nice clean look.
The first thing you notice about the new Nook is that it's compact and it looks significantly shorter than the Kindle, though a bit squatter the Kindle is slightly narrower. Ideally, it would be a tad narrower, so people with smaller hands could more easily hold the whole device in their hands like they would a smartphone.
The designers also coated the device with something called soft-touch paint, which gives it a smooth rubberized feel. That's nice, but the downside to this type of finish is that it does show finger smudges, so you'll regularly have to wipe down the back of the device unless you buy a cover plenty are available.
As it stands, chances are you'll end up holding it more from one side of the device or the other depending on whether you're a righty or lefty and position your index finger around the back of the device in the middle.
With the middle of the back indented slightly, you get a little ridge to grip the Nook from the back. All in all, the touch screen is responsive and the second-generation Nook is zippy for an e-ink device. Instead of the screen flashing every page turn as it does with the Kindle, the screen flashes about every fifth page turn.
However, it should be noted that in our side-by-side comparison with the Kindle, the two e-readers turned pages at essentially the same speed. The device isn't as zippy as an iPad 2, but books open quickly and pages turn in a fraction of a second with a swipe of the screen or just touch the right margin to page forward and the left margin to page back. There are also four very slim "hard" buttons along the side of the screen that you can use to turn pages in the settings menu, you can change whether to page forward with the top or bottom buttons.
Holding those buttons down allows you to fast forward--or rewind--through a book's pages, which is a nice feature. Both use the same Neonode infrared touch technology for their touch screens along with E Ink's latest Pearl display that's also found in the Kindle and Sony readers.
MX processor. Right now the Nook just feels a little zippier, especially when it comes to doing things like accessing the e-readers' respective online e-book stores. We get the feeling the designers married the look and feel of the company's redesigned Web site with the Nook Color's interface, and it largely lives up to its billing as the "Simple Touch Reader.
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