![]() The Nook Color has a bright and very clear 7 inch widescreen capacitive glass touch screen along with about 10 hours’ worth of battery life. The included stock Android browser does include the ability to run Adobe Flash. The Nook Color stock software experience is nice for what it does, but still rather limited overall. Besides being a good reader platform for books and magazines, you can browse the web, do email, do social networking, and run a limited but growing number of apps (mostly paid but a few for free) from the Barnes & Noble Nook Color App Store. To be perfectly honest, the stock Nook Color version of Android is very locked down. It takes the Internet and turns it into a very portable book. The Nook Color shines best as a word-centric consumption device. I’ve already got the latest iPod Touch with dual cameras, so I don’t need or currently want cameras in a tablet device. Keep in mind, the Nook Color is not an iPad and sells for half the price of the cheapest Apple jewell. I’ve had my Nook Color for about a month at this point, long enough to develop a real feel for how it integrates into my life.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |