devices, reviews

Mossberg reviews nook: “It’s not fully baked yet”

Walt Mossberg reviews the nook

Walt Mossberg reviews the nook

Thinking of buying a Barnes & Noble nook instead of a Kindle? It’s sexier, especially with that full color touch panel on the bottom, but the Wall Street Journal’s Walt Mossberg says it’s not “fully baked” and that you should hold off for now.

You can watch his video review below, but here’s his summary after spending a week with the device:

    GOOD

  • you can lend books [yeah but not very easily! -Ed.]
  • the touchschreen navigation/keyboard panel is unique
  • BAD

  • it’s slower than the Kindle
  • generally buggy

In his companion review at AllThingsD, he says this about the sluggishness of the nook:

For instance, the Nook constantly delayed taking me to books while the main screen displayed a message that said “formatting.” Its standard practice is to open books you select not at the actual start of the book, but at a description of the book. Turning pages inside books was slower than on the Kindle. Looking up a word in the built-in dictionary, a quick process on the Kindle, was far harder on the Nook. Even swiping the touch screen to turn pages would suddenly stop working for periods of time.

In the video, he adds, “After a week of testing the nook I have to say my overall conclusion is it’s not a match at launch against the kindle… It looks like a product that was rushed to market… I recommend that if you’re interested in the nook, you wait a while until it’s fully baked.”

“Nook E-Reader Has Potential, but Needs Work” [AllThingsD]

Thursday, September 2nd

“The Burnt House” by Faye Kellerman
Price: $1.99
“At 8:15 in the morning, a small commuter plane carrying forty-seven passengers crashes into an apartment building in Granada Hills, California. Shock waves ripple through Los Angeles, as L.A.P.D. Lieutenant Peter Decker works overtime to calm rampant fears of a 9/11-type terror attack. But a grisly mystery lives inside the plane’s charred and twisted wreckage: the unidentified bodies of four extra travelers. And there is no sign of an airline employee who was supposedly on the catastrophic flight.”


Wednesday, September 1st

“Bake Sale Murder” by Leslie Meier
Price: $0.00 expired
“Ever since local developer Fred Stanton and his wife, Mimi, built five modular homes next door to Lucy Stone’s farmhouse, life just hasn’t been the same. With Mimi complaining about everything from the state of Lucy’s lawn to another neighbor’s lovable dog, quaint Tinker’s Cove, Maine, is now entangled in cul-de-sac politics and backstabbing. And when Mimi doesn’t show up for her shift at The Hat and Mitten Fund bake sale, the scent of burnt sugar leads Lucy to a shocking discovery: Mimi, face down on her kitchen floor–with a knife in her back.”


Tuesday, August 31st

“Black Widow” by Cliff Ryder
Price: $1.24
“Agents recruited for the clandestine organization known as Room 59 play for keeps, or die trying. But now new Room 59 agent Ajza Manaev, a top MI6 operative, discovers just how high the stakes really are when she goes undercover inside Chechnya’s terrorist training camps, where bitter young widows harness their hate as suicide bombers. Ajza doesn’t know she’s being manipulated by many sides — and in a game where the ground is always shifting, Ajza is inducted by hellfire into Room 59′s harsh reality: she’s on her own.”


Monday, August 30th

“Billy Boyle” by James R. Benn
Price: $0.00
“What’s a 22-year-old Irish-American cop who’s never been out of Massachusetts before doing at Beardsley Hall, an English country house, having lunch with King Haakon of Norway? Billy Boyle himself wonders. Back home in Southie, he’d barely made detective when war was declared. Unwilling to fight—and perhaps die—for England, he was relieved when his mother wangled a job for him on the staff of a general married to her distant cousin. But the general turns out to be Dwight D. Eisenhower, whose headquarters are in London, which is undergoing the Blitz. And Uncle Ike wants Billy to be his personal investigator.”


Saturday, August 28th

“Kill the Story” by John Luciew
Price: $1.99
“A serial killer known as ‘The Reader’ is murdering journalists in the manner of their most famous stories. The New York Times assigns Cassandra ‘Cassie’ Jordan to cover its every development. The assignment returns Cassie to her familiar stomping grounds of Harrisburg, Pa., reuniting her with Frank “Telly” Tellis, chief political reporter for The Harrisburg Herald. Only Telly can put together the murderous truth as the secret motive for the killings is buried deep in his journalistic past. But can he solve the puzzle before falling under The Reader’s deadly crosshairs?”


Friday, August 27th

“Long Lost” by Daivd Morrell
Price: $1.99
“Brad Denning is a successful architect living a perfect life in Denver with his loving wife and son. Now, a man claiming to be the brother who disappeared when they were kids has mysteriously appeared, and Brad is eager to take him in, despite the man’s haggard appearance and reluctance to reveal anything about his past. “Petey” is a welcome addition to the family, until a camping trip goes terribly wrong and Brad returns home to find that his devoted wife and son have been abducted.”


Thursday, August 26th

“Wasted” by Mark Johnson
Price: $1.30
“Mark Johnson began stealing at the age of seven, was drinking by the age of eight, and took his first hit of heroin at eleven. With searing honesty, Wasted documents Mark’s descent into the depths of addiction and criminality. His story is at once shocking and inspiring a compelling account of one man’s struggle to save himself, and help save others in the process.”

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