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- #Inkbook model t62 pdf#
- #Inkbook model t62 install#
- #Inkbook model t62 android#
- #Inkbook model t62 software#
- #Inkbook model t62 plus#
From my experience the touchscreen works well. The inkBook Obsidian has a capacitive touchscreen that supports two-point touch for things like pinch-zooming. For the most part the frontlight is fairly evenly distributed but there are some areas of brighter and dimmer tones, with some shadowy areas at the top of the screen (see video review about 2 minutes in). The tone of this one is pretty neutral, with slightly more yellow tone than blue. Some frontlights are yellow in tone, some blue. The glass has a nice premium feel to it and the screen looks very clear with the light illuminating from the sides. The frontlight on the inkBook Obsidian has some pluses and minuses. Personally I’ve never considered ereaders with 212 ppi to be a problem (not once have I found myself ever thinking while reading that the text is hard to read and needs to be sharper, but then again I don’t use small font sizes). Some will be disappointed that it doesn’t have 300 ppi like other ereaders (it has 212 ppi). Text looks good on the E Ink display, very clear and defined. One notable difference is the lack of audio support on the inkBook Obsidian-it does not have a headphone jack.
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The main hardware components are identical, including the 6-inch 1024 x 758 resolution E Ink Carta screen, the two-point capacitive touchscreen, the dual-core 1.0 GHz processor with 512MB of RAM, the 8GB of internal storage space, and the inclusion of a microSD card slot.
#Inkbook model t62 plus#
I thought I would dislike the sensor as much as the sensor on the new Nook GlowLight Plus since they are in the same spot, but I find it less sensitive so I’m not always accidentally touching it and getting booted out of the book (or maybe the Nook just trained me to stop touching that spot).įrom a hardware perspective, the inkBook Obsidian is basically the T62+ in a new shell.
#Inkbook model t62 software#
It’s kind of redundant because there’s a software button on-screen for back as well. There’s also a back button below the screen but it’s not a real button it’s a sensor. The only downside is they don’t work with most sideloaded apps, even though they did with the T62. They have a nice responsive feel and they are flush with the screen so they aren’t easy to accidentally press since they are surrounded by hard material. There’s a button on each side of the screen and they can be changed in the settings which one pages forward and back. It has a flush glass screen similar to the Kindle Voyage, but there are cutouts for physical page turn buttons instead of sensors. The overall design of the inkBook Obsidian is quite nice.
#Inkbook model t62 android#
But on the flip side Android offers more reading options and is open to a lot more possibilities. That being said, the inkBook still suffers from the same kind of issues that all Android ereaders suffer from: most 3rd party apps don’t work well because they aren’t designed for E Ink screens battery life isn’t as good as non-Android ereaders the page buttons only work with a few apps and the Android software is less-optimized than what you get on Kindles and Kobos, and it lacks some features that they offer.
#Inkbook model t62 pdf#
The preinstalled reading apps work well-I was especially surprised by how well PDF reflow works-and so do apps like Moon Reader and Cool Reader. The overall design is a step up from the others, the screen looks good, and Boyue’s software seems to be a bit more stable than Onyx’s Android software.
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The inkBook Obsidian is the nicest 6-inch Android E Ink ereader I’ve reviewed so far.
#Inkbook model t62 install#
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