I’m using Thorium at present. Not thrilled with it.
Recently upgraded from an ancient paperwhite with a near 600 week streak to a Pocketbook Inkpad Colour 3. I would consider myself to be a heavy user of ebooks, its the only way I read and I read at least an hour a day every day.
Decided to upgrade as it was time to replace the battery in the paperwhite, I wanted something with a faster page refresh, a larger screen, and I wanted a colour screen for comic books.
As I have gotten older the text size I read with has increased, so a larger screen is better as I have to turn the page less often, and a faster refresh rate I am waiting less when I do as I am turning the pages more often.
I am very pleased with it so far, its much nicer to use than my paperwhite and it feels good to be away from amazon. Obviously it is not going to compare to a decent tablet for colour depth or refresh rate, but I wanted eink for the battery and day light performance.
Nook Glowlight 3, which I’ve had since release in 2017
I had such high hopes for Barnes and Noble’s e-readers - they were super well positioned to dominate the market, but instead decided to make half-assed tablets. It was soul crushing
My 10+ year old Kindle Paperwhite 2 keeps living on, and I will use it until the day it dies for real.
Me too. Kindle is so cheap and easy to use. I know everyone hates Amazon but Kindle is a very solid product.
Kobo Libre 2. I replaced an ancient backlit Kindle when it died and wouldn’t give Jeff Bezos any more money. The only gripe I have is that the dark mode toggle is one level deep in the menus and not on the main screen.
My kobos acting up registering false touches so I’ve been using my phone and moon+ which I bought years ago now.
Kinda miss e-ink so it’s a stopgap.
i also use koreader on my phone
Sony PRS-350 😀
It’s old, but I am not a big e-book reader. Will probably get a Kobo one once this dies.
Edit: Just read other comments and noticed that you are talking about software, not hardware. Sorry, don’t read e-books on computer or mobile, unless it’s a webnovel, in that case, simple browser or official app of the site.
Sony club! I use whichever was the second to last release (TP2 or something). Over a decade old, battery still lasts a few weeks, and it just works.
Yeah, it’s a pretty neat device. Don’t have any issue with it.
I don’t read on desktop, but I use Pocketbook Reader on my tablet. Free with no ads, and lets me use any colors I want, override terrible embedded fonts and cramped line height, change margins, etc. It does have a couple of quirks that annoy me from time to time, but I haven’t found a replacement I like better.
I use Librera on my phone and Calibre on my desktop, with FBReader for those pesky lcpl files from NetGalley.
I like Koreader. It’s a pain for the first hour of setup, but it runs so much faster than the other ones I’ve tried: Moon+, Aldiko, and a couple of open source ones that bugged out too often.
Phone or Kobo, depending on source.
I love the openness of the kobo - if you’re a technical user it’s way easier to get it to do cool stuff.
The feature I like most comes from this project: https://github.com/janeczku/calibre-web
It’s a selfhosted webapp where you can upload your epubs, the killer feature is that it can be a proxy that sits between your Kobo and the official store, so just hitting sync on the device itself will also sync all your 3rd party books.
Not fiddling with cables to transfer the books is awesome.
Kobo
ReadEra on my tablet, and I think just a FireFox extension on the PC. I don’t remember exactly what made me move from Aldiko to ReadEra, but I liked it enough to grab the paid version. Sources are all from MAM, so I’m not sure about options that let you buy & download in-app.
This. Even the free version is great.
Kobo is best ko
A Boox Nova 2 and a jailbroken Kindle Paperwhite Signature with KOReader.