Review: Sony Reader WiFi PRS-T1 eBook Reader

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Uploaded by on Oct 2, 2011

Get Sony PRS-T1: http://getth.at/aixgv Sony PRS-T1 Review: http://www.the-ebook-reader.com/sony-prs-t1.html This review shows the new Reader Wi-Fi from Sony, the PRS-T1. The Reader Wi-Fi is a big change for Sony ereaders. It has a plastic body instead of the usual aluminum and it runs a disguised version of Android instead of Linux. More Sony Reader Wi-Fi reviews to come. Subscribe to keep in the loop.

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Sony Reader PRS-T1 at Amazon: http://getth.at/ayzzw

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  • Anyone knows what is the exact version name of the Android that PRS T1 use?

  • @polkadot1213 forget about the sony and the kobo, buy a nook or kindle

    

  • Would you recommend this eReader or the Kobo touch eReader? I'm torn between the two

  • Perfect review! Thank you.

  • I really wish they stuck to the Aluminum body, as it gives it such a solid feel.

  • I really wish Sony had done more with their software, and also allowed for folders, playlists for music, etc - but I've managed a lot of work-arounds for that stuff. All in all, after dealing with a steep learning curve I now have a device that has made my morning commutes wonderful. I especially like the multi-language support since I'm living in a francophone community and using the device to really polish my French. If anyone has any questions, feel free to send me a message.

  • I bought one and love/hate it as well. I'm leaning a lot more towards loving it as I learn to deal with it's quirks. The device is such a perfect size, and with the standard cover it slips easily into my back pack without a second thought. I've had to use some third party solutions to manage content (Calibre for managing books, Open Office for creating good PDFs). I've made a personal calendar/appointment PDF, bus schedule thingy, and exported a lot of my own writing for proof reading.

  • Ok, I bought one. I'm both loving and hating it. It's the perfect size for reading, very ergonomic, the case is a must have, and listening to music while reading is cool. The down side, for me, is that I can't create folders on the device for organizing my stuff, and so far it won't handle links in my pdf documents that link to other pdf documents - I like doing that for jumping around reference material. Links to the web work fine.

  • Thank you so much for the review. I'm having a hard time making a choice because I want to do a lot of proof reading/annotating while I commute. The iPad seems best for annotating, but is too big for commuting. The kindle products seem lacking when it comes to annotating. This may be the best product for me.

  • wonderful review. Thanks

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