Looking at your list of advantages, I have to ask why print books are more comfortable to read for you. If you know why you find them more comfortable, there might be things you can do to mimic it with an ereader.
Something about the ergonomics for my wrists, I think. Before I bought my ereader, I played with every model I could get my hands on to try to find something comfortable. This might be resolved with better touchscreens; I don't know (I am more used to touchscreen swiping now that I have a smartphone; when I bought my Sony I was still looking for something that also had buttons). I do have a cover, but it's a pretty cheap flimsy one--I'm just hesitant to spend $70 on a fancy cover until I know I'll use the ereader a lot.
Paper is also definitely easier on my eyes because of the contrast. But the newer eInk models I've looked at are much nicer, so IDK.
I thought about something with an LCD screen, but the shorter battery life and inability to read in direct sun are still pushing me towards eInk for my purposes.
no subject
Something about the ergonomics for my wrists, I think. Before I bought my ereader, I played with every model I could get my hands on to try to find something comfortable. This might be resolved with better touchscreens; I don't know (I am more used to touchscreen swiping now that I have a smartphone; when I bought my Sony I was still looking for something that also had buttons). I do have a cover, but it's a pretty cheap flimsy one--I'm just hesitant to spend $70 on a fancy cover until I know I'll use the ereader a lot.
Paper is also definitely easier on my eyes because of the contrast. But the newer eInk models I've looked at are much nicer, so IDK.
I thought about something with an LCD screen, but the shorter battery life and inability to read in direct sun are still pushing me towards eInk for my purposes.