- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmygrad.ml
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmygrad.ml
- My partner has a BOOX and loves it. I still like my Kobo, but I admit that the BOOX is pretty neat with all the other stuff it can do since it has android. 
- I hate articles about market success but I love my boox device… it’s sooo much better than the alternatives it’s not even close. It’s a pity their tablets are becoming more expensive. 
- They’re just another ebook vendor right? - A BOOX device is basically an Android tablet with an eye-friendly e-ink screen. The nice part is that you can install whatever book store you want on it, you can get the Kindle, the Kobo, Libby for library books, Moon+ Reader, or any other reading app you want. You’re not locked into one ecosystem. - The other thing is that BOOX devices are for writing and productivity, not just reading. They have stylus support and fantastic note-taking apps built in. So you can mark up a PDF, take meeting notes, or split the screen to have a book open on one side and your notes on the other. - So, while a typical ebook vendor gives you a closed device to consume their content, BOOX gives you an open, flexible tool that you can use anyway you like. - They’re not that open because they steal Linux: https://web.archive.org/web/20220109040915/http://bbs.onyx-international.com/t/install-linux-or-alternate-os-and-gpl2-kernel-source/698 - seems they have kernels on github, but I haven’t looked too closely https://github.com/onyx-intl/Kernel_BOOX60 - That repository is only for the Boox60, a device from 2009. They haven’t been releasing kernels for modern devices. - yeah that’s unfortunate then 
 
 
 
 
 




