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Barnes & Noble's Nook Color, a $250 device caught halfway between e-ink readers like the Kindle, and full-fledged tablets like the iPad. Jim Seida Magazines are the other part of the Nook Color pitch.
Jennifer Perry, the new head of NOOK e-readers and digital services. She recently conducted an interview and dropped a huge ...
The Nook Color’s screen has another big distinction from those on most e-ink devices: It’s touch sensitive. You select items you want to read, turn pages and highlight text by touching the screen.
There were only about 15 free apps when I checked. Navigation. The Nook Color gets high scores for navigation in our e-book reader Ratings (available to subscribers); it has changed little if at all.
The Nook Color does have a better Web browser than most e-book readers, and runs on an Android operating system, but it can't compare in multipurpose prowess to the Apple iPad or Samsung Galaxy Tab.
While plenty of people still aren't quite sure what to make of Barnes & Noble's Nook Color, the device seems to have homed in on one target market with laser precision — women. According to The ...
And while the Nook Color (in its official software form) may still fall short of being a full-fledged Android tablet, it's doing a better job masquerading as one.
The Nook Color uses internal flash memory anyway, so running the Android OS off a card really doesn't slow things down much, if at all. There is full access to most apps, but the Nook Color does ...
The Nook Color’s screen has another big distinction from those on most e-ink devices: It’s touch sensitive. You select items you want to read, turn pages and highlight text by touching the screen.
The Nook Color’s gonna be $250 when it launches “on or around” Nov. 19, and they’re “not thinking of lowering this price point anytime soon” no matter what, say, Amazon or Apple do.
Nook Color may not make anyone with skin in the mobile media reader game happy. It doesn't have the 3G connectivity or battery life of the Kindle, which makes it harder for road warriors.
According to Nook2Android, your dual-booting Nook Color running CM7 will be able to: Connect to any Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n Download the Gmail, Facebook, Pandora, radio, Kindle and even the Nook app ...