[UPDATES: Check out our ereader comparison for links to more resources, and summaries ofall major available ereaders.
Full review of the PRS-700 here. Also, you should know that if you buy a Sony Reader and get a lemon, you're in for a headache. There are pictures of the 700's screen vs. the 505's screen at MobileRead; it's a dramatic difference. I currently read on a 505 and I've been quite happy with it. Plus the screen hasn't broken (probably helped by not being a touchscreen). The 505 is also the cheapest quality ereader for $270 on Amazon. [REUPDATE: The PRS-300 is now available for even less than the 505. There are also a few other options out there for around $200. Check our ereader comparison for quick summaries of the available ereaders out there.]
Despite the “advancements” made in Kindle 2, it’s essentially the same device. In retrospect, I wouldn’t buy another PRS-700, but I would absolutely recommend a PRS-505.
For potential Kindle customers: think twice before buying one, unless you read newspapers and magazines almost exclusively. Original article continues from here.]
I was in the market for an ereader for about a month. At first I was seduced by the Kindle’s wireless everywhere feature, and the fact that the Kindle store on Amazon has more ebooks than anywhere else, and almost always the cheapest books, too.

The Amazon Kindle
After a few weeks of research, though, I chose the Reader, the PRS-700. I’ve had it for about a

The Sony Reader PRS-700
week now, and I haven’t looked back. I’m not going to get too exhaustively into the features of both readers in this post, you can find such things here, and here, and here. And I’ll be doing a complete review of my experience with the Reader in a future post.
So here I’m focusing on the criteria I used to decide on the Reader, including the best feature of all, which Sony seems determined to hide. …
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