But it is a decision, and there are alternatives, from companies such as Kobo. In this article we review the Kobo Aura One, a large-screen eReader with exceptional water-resistance and good night-time reading features.
Design & build quality
The Aura One is a plain, somewhat generic-looking, slightly larger-than-average eReader. The front, admirably, is the sort of design that tries not to be noticed, presumably to place all attention on the book you’re reading; there are no visible buttons, and even the Kobo logo, dark grey on black, is barely noticeable (except in some of the company’s brightly lit press photos). In use the product is essentially a thick black rectangle around the edges of a book.
The One is almost perfectly flat on the front, with no detectable difference between bezel and screen under the finger, just a narrow and very low rim around the very edge of the device. But the gently curved rear of the device is a different matter, with swirly grip texturing and a large debossed logo at the top right, along with a bright blue power button to complete the decoration. It’s nice to hold and not drop-prone.
The size – well, we’ll come back to the benefits of that larger screen in the next section, but note that you pay for this in terms of portability as well as price.
It’s still a great, light, one-hand design that fits easily in the smaller pockets of a rucksack, but in certain ways you may notice its slight extra width – you might have been able to fit a Kindle in your handspan or jeans pocket, for instance, but struggle to do the same with this. Check the dimensions in the specs section, cut out a piece of cardboard matching them, and spend a few moments seeing how much the extra size is going to bother you.
The device feels cheaper than it is – lightweight, uncolourful, plasticky – but that tends to be the case with eReaders. And in an odd sense this is rather reassuring, since it feels like it would probably be fine if you dropped it.
Screen
At 7.8in the Aura One offers roughly 70% more screen space than the standard 6in offering of the Kindles. You’re pretty much getting the area of a standard B-format paperback, which makes for a pleasant reading experience – there’s less need to either squint at small type or crank it up so much that you’re constantly turning the page.
The Aura One has front-lighting (rather than the backlighting which shines the light through the panel, E Ink displays with this feature shine light on to the display) and this is able to adapt to ambient lighting conditions. Kobo boasts that its ComfortLight PRO tech automatically selects optimal colour temperature to help your sleep patterns (even white light has blue and yellow components) and while we can’t offer a scientific verdict on this it seemed restful, and placebo effect or not we slept well after nighttime reading sessions.
Getting eBooks
There are lots of ways to load eBooks on to the Aura One, but the most obvious – and of course the one Kobo wants you to use, since the company gets a share of the revenue – is to buy books directly from the Kobo store. And if you’re used to browsing the Kindle store, this may be a disappointment.
(Indeed, on the day we checked – and double-checked on other people’s machines, to make sure it was nothing to do with us! – there were a couple of cheaply made porn titles on Kobo’s Short Stories front page. Mild stuff, admittedly, but not something any human curator would choose to highlight.)
OverDrive
Fortunately there are alternatives. If you’ve got DRM-free eBooks in one of the numerous formats supported by the Aura One – and with the right plugins you can even prepare Kindle purchases for this treatment – you can plug it into your PC or Mac and drag-and-drop them on to the device (you can’t email books to the system, though, and it’s not good at syncing eBooks other than Kobo store purchases across multiple readers). You can also save web articles to Pocket and they’ll show up on your reader.
But the method we’re most pleased by is called OverDrive. This is a service (and a mobile app) that lets you borrow eBooks from your local library, assuming you’re a member and have obtained a PIN for online reservations and so on. The selection isn’t huge but it’s free, and unlike a lot of the free eBooks you see in other places – the out-of-copyright classics on Kobo’s store, for example – the formatting is up to commercial standards.
Your local library will have a limited number of digital copies and in our experience you will probably have to ‘return’ it after a shorter period than with physical books (a fortnight, in our case, as opposed to the three weeks we get normally). But you don’t need to do anything – it just vanishes at the correct time, so there’s no danger of late fees.
OverDrive is a nice bonus feature that isn’t built into Kindle readers in the same way. (It is possible to get OverDrive books on to a Kindle, but it’s more difficult.)