nook glowlight reduced to 25 dunno if national or local
Top comments
MissionaryMan
7 Mar 173#19
I love my nook. Awesome reader. I use Calibre as a book library. Well worth £25.
Latest comments (51)
walpolecherie
16 Mar 17#51
I bought mine for £60 just over a year ago...think i have used it once as much prefer my kindle and clip on light as easier to get books than the faf about to get them on pc from libiary then to download them onto nook :disappointed:
tckay
15 Mar 17#50
I just called and they are showing no stock - nationally. The lady did say the odd one might be floating about so best to pop into your local store if youre in the vicinity. Shame, sounded like a bargain.
amour3k
14 Mar 17#49
Has anyone found any of these in a London Sainsburys?, thanx. :-)
Makkand
13 Mar 17#48
D'oh!
sreenireddy
13 Mar 17#47
preston had 1 I didn't buy it as I use kindle
Makkand
12 Mar 171#45
Customer services did a search for it in store and told me they do not stock it :/ ...anyone fancy selling one gathering dust?
brilly to Makkand
12 Mar 17#46
my local told me it was january sale stock - dunno whether true or not but i couldn't find it!
benezekiel58
10 Mar 17#44
thanks for the advice .i will do that
hcc27
9 Mar 17#43
I agree, but the reason I use the Nook for reading on (be it ebooks, websites) or playing Sudoku over a proper tablet is that I can avoid the eye strain that's part and parcel of using a backlit screen, not to mention the blue wavelengths of light that can cause havoc with your sleep at night. I have a couple of 'proper' tablets for Netflix, videos and photos etc but won't attempt to read a novel (or in my case text-heavy scientific publications) on any of them. With the Nook I can read for hours without straining my eyes, there's no difference between eInk and paper when it comes to eye fatigue.
I'm waiting for the day someone manages to hack a new Kindle to run full Android - inarguably the Simple Touch screen is now getting ancient - but until that happens, the Nook will have to do.
gavin1
9 Mar 17#42
When they came out in 2013, maybe, but given the limitations (2Gb Memory [although expandable via SD cards], inability to play video (or anything that updates the screen quickly), Inability to update the OS [runs android 4.4] then its not really viable as a tablet today, except in very limited cases.
When mine had full android I frequently had issues where a T&C pop up for a public Wifi didn't appear correctly on the browser so I could not use some public Wifi. My Kindle handles this much better than the Rooted Nook did.
Don't get me wrong if you have to travel a lot and want to carry the least you can, its a great simple lightweight device for basic web and email they are great, but the market has moved on. The Amazon Fire 7 is only £50, and that too can be rooted to give a more versatile device for todays uses. I accept the battery life is not as good in the Fire, but that the pay off for the better screen.
hcc27
9 Mar 17#41
I hear what you say, but it's horses for courses really. It took me only 20 min to do the above and root it and I've had my Nook 2 years running Android perfectly. The way I get most of my ebooks is via Dropbox download or copy to SD card, but a full Android tablet with the e-ink screen and 2 weeks of battery life simply cannot compare to a Kindle, IMHO.
danm9
9 Mar 17#40
Which store was this!?
benezekiel58
8 Mar 171#27
i bought one to replace my kindle.you have to buy your e books from sainsburys. its an ok machine but a terrible and limited buying experience .
pickledtink to benezekiel58
8 Mar 17#32
Liked your post by mistake.:smirk:. I meant to reply instead. You can download calibre to store a library then buy loads of books for peanuts on ebay and load on to your Nook. I have got very little patience with fiddly tech stuff but have been happiuly doing this from the start on my Nook as Barnes and Noble books were so overpriced.
gavin1 to benezekiel58
8 Mar 171#39
Sainsbury's moved out of the e-books (and all digital entertainment) business last year, and moved all purchases to Kobo.
benfromlondon
8 Mar 17#38
This is a good price - but in my experience the Nook Glowlight isn't reliable. I had two and in both cases they stopped responding. Might just be me, of course.
JaneEB
8 Mar 17#35
I can't believe people are complaining about having to buy e-books from a specific place. I have never bought an ebook and I have had a reader for about 7 years.
cicobuff to JaneEB
8 Mar 17#37
You have to realise that not everyone has the technical ability to be able to cross convert, my tech clueless mother has a kindle and unless when I am visiting I put books on it converted in the likes of calibre she at least can buy from the Amazon store.
This is a great deal for anyone that does have the technical know how. Personally I have no need to want to upgrade to anything from my old robust Sony PRS-650 which does not have Wi-fi let alone any e-shop, but like some 'Fisher Price' like Apple users that need a walled garden structure they most certainly should steer clear of this deal, unless they have the desire/gumption to actually google and learn and have an open choice in where to get their books from, alongside stripping DRM and converting formats.
cheekyangus
8 Mar 17#34
Unless I'm missing something the Glowlight mentioned in the deal is an E-Ink device, not a tablet, and isn't running Android.
There are other Nooks that are tablets and do run Android but this isn't one of them.
buddn07 to cheekyangus
8 Mar 171#36
The Nook SimpleTouch was an e-ink device that ran a skinned version of Android.
pickledtink
8 Mar 17#33
Hot op. I paid double that for mine and it's worth every penny. Can read anywhere whether dark or in bright sunlight.
MissionaryMan
7 Mar 173#19
I love my nook. Awesome reader. I use Calibre as a book library. Well worth £25.
pickledtink to MissionaryMan
8 Mar 17#31
Me too. Love my Nook and there's book collections of thousands for about a fiver on ebay and others will get you a specific book for a pound.
pickledtink
8 Mar 17#30
+1
Lord.vader
8 Mar 17#29
I have the basic touch version. it has the books I originally downloaded onto the memory card only.
Is it of any use now?
buddn07
8 Mar 171#28
Got the Nook Simple Touch, and it's still running Android 2.3, which is no longer supported by Google Play Books.
This combined with the in-store goose chase makes this cold from me.
JaneEB
8 Mar 17#26
Wish I could find one of these. I love my Kobo but would like one with a light. Incidentally, I have never paid for an e-book and I also use calibre for the library, plenty of books in the local library to keep me going a while, and quite a few free ones on Amazon too.
rastbury
7 Mar 171#25
Great price point. Just be careful with screen as is easily damaged and creates "light-leaks" which are very distracting, but get a cheap case and it'll be fine
gavin1
7 Mar 172#24
So did I when I got it, but the certificates in the Kindle app that was OK on the Nook expire, so it would not download from Amazon. There is no easy way to update them to get the Kindle app to download. Its possible but a bit of a pig to do and not really something a non technical person would want as an out of the box experience.
Heck without fiddling you can't even register it becasue B&N removed the server to get past the start up screens.
If you have bought one here's the way to get past the start up screens without registering form the XDA forums
Turn on the device, but do NOT start setting it up. B&N devilishly waits until the last step to ask you to create an account, at which point the following instructions don’t work. If you do start setting it up, just turn it off and back on again.
Hold down the top right button on the front of the device and slide your finger from left to right across the top of the E Ink screen. (It’s a little hard to see, but it’s the Nook’s default next page button if you were using your right hand. For past Kindle owners, it’s the one in the same spot as the previous page button on a Kindle.)
A ‘Factory’ button should appear in the top left corner of the screen. Press it.
Once in the Factory menu, hold down the top right button on the front of the device and tap the bottom right corner of the screen.
You should now see a ‘Skip Oobe’ button. Tap that and the Nook should finally load the home screen.
To be honest I just bought a used Kindle...
brilly
7 Mar 17#23
have a standard nook, like it even for simple things like own screen saver and pictures of books on shelf!
if anyone finds a spare then lemme know :man:
edit: they only in white? would surely get filthy!
steedam
7 Mar 17#22
This is a fab ereader but I decided to go back to a kindle when they dropped the UK customers. I liked being able to access a library and buy via wifi without having to mess around rooting and downloading g epubs. Good if you don't mind putting in a bit of extra effort. This was the first ereader I had with its own light, brilliant for reading in bed.
hcc27
7 Mar 171#21
I've hacked my Nook Simple Touch to run full Android (albeit an older version) and have Amazon Kindle, Dropbox, Moonreader and many other useful Android apps working perfectly. Can use SD card as well as WiFi which works perfectly to load books from Dropbox as well as via the Kindle app of course if you prefer mobi (I'm more an ePub kind of guy). Can even play games on it, perfect for Sudoku for instance. I've now picked up a few cheap used Nooks to retain as backups as you can't buy them any more. You can even get third party batteries on Amazon and other sites.
A Nook running Android makes the Kindle Paperwhite look like a proper paperweight.
But at £25 if you can find one its a great buy, cheers sreenireddy
Wapht to DazLFC
7 Mar 172#8
I have an old Nook, never updated, works fine.
tnm1975 to DazLFC
7 Mar 17#9
never updated mine, never used the nook store anyway! I buy books elsewhere or borrow from library.
hcc27 to DazLFC
7 Mar 171#20
You don't need updates to read e Pubs or PDFs copied to the microSD card.
djmpne
7 Mar 17#13
If this can be rooted then can amazon app be installed and effectively you have a kindle paperwhite at a quarter of the price?
tech3475 to djmpne
7 Mar 171#14
Unless they've blocked it since due to the ancient version of Android, I was able to do this myself.
Only downside was that the buttons didn't work.
edit:
Worst case, it may be possible to remove the DRM and put it on the Nook for use with it's native app.
gavin1 to djmpne
7 Mar 17#18
Yes but due to age you can only load books in an offline mode, not over Wifi, Works but is fiddly.
amour3k
7 Mar 17#17
Not what they asked?, lol. :-)
They wanted clarification as per the below:
:-)
Interesting enough, both comments followed each other in the Thread above ..... lol.
RoosterNo1
7 Mar 17#15
Nook have withdrawn from the uk.. so you may struggle with registration - which is required.
There are ways round this, but if you are expecting this to work out of the box - you maybe disappointed :-(
slimy31 to RoosterNo1
7 Mar 17#16
My old Nook recently did what appeared to be a factory reset, so I was left with the registration process again. As you say there is a way around it, but it's remarkably fiddly.
So great price for a great device, just research the offline registration first.
Agent004
7 Mar 171#7
What the hell is it ??
Morsicatio to Agent004
7 Mar 17#11
I think it's at Sainsbury's
joesmum to Agent004
7 Mar 17#12
book reader at a guess
Mex5150
7 Mar 17#10
Fantastic deal, either root it and do whatever updates you want or leave it as is and don't worry about updates, either is good. Regarding reader software, Bookari is my reader of choice as it synchronises reading progress with other devices, so you can jump from tablet to eReader to phone and not lose your place in what you are reading.
bandit17
7 Mar 171#6
Great price, shame I don't have any Sainsbury's near me, I would definitely buy it.
You don't really need updates for this, you can just root it and install Google Play on this!
Then you can install apps like Cool Reader or Moon+ Reader Pro (if you got it for 10p when it was on sale) for PDF support.
tnm1975
6 Mar 171#3
Fantastic price. love mine! if I can find one at this price I'll be buying a spare!
Opening post
Top comments
Latest comments (51)
I'm waiting for the day someone manages to hack a new Kindle to run full Android - inarguably the Simple Touch screen is now getting ancient - but until that happens, the Nook will have to do.
When mine had full android I frequently had issues where a T&C pop up for a public Wifi didn't appear correctly on the browser so I could not use some public Wifi. My Kindle handles this much better than the Rooted Nook did.
Don't get me wrong if you have to travel a lot and want to carry the least you can, its a great simple lightweight device for basic web and email they are great, but the market has moved on. The Amazon Fire 7 is only £50, and that too can be rooted to give a more versatile device for todays uses. I accept the battery life is not as good in the Fire, but that the pay off for the better screen.
This is a great deal for anyone that does have the technical know how. Personally I have no need to want to upgrade to anything from my old robust Sony PRS-650 which does not have Wi-fi let alone any e-shop, but like some 'Fisher Price' like Apple users that need a walled garden structure they most certainly should steer clear of this deal, unless they have the desire/gumption to actually google and learn and have an open choice in where to get their books from, alongside stripping DRM and converting formats.
There are other Nooks that are tablets and do run Android but this isn't one of them.
Is it of any use now?
This combined with the in-store goose chase makes this cold from me.
Heck without fiddling you can't even register it becasue B&N removed the server to get past the start up screens.
If you have bought one here's the way to get past the start up screens without registering form the XDA forums
Turn on the device, but do NOT start setting it up. B&N devilishly waits until the last step to ask you to create an account, at which point the following instructions don’t work. If you do start setting it up, just turn it off and back on again.
Hold down the top right button on the front of the device and slide your finger from left to right across the top of the E Ink screen. (It’s a little hard to see, but it’s the Nook’s default next page button if you were using your right hand. For past Kindle owners, it’s the one in the same spot as the previous page button on a Kindle.)
A ‘Factory’ button should appear in the top left corner of the screen. Press it.
Once in the Factory menu, hold down the top right button on the front of the device and tap the bottom right corner of the screen.
You should now see a ‘Skip Oobe’ button. Tap that and the Nook should finally load the home screen.
To be honest I just bought a used Kindle...
if anyone finds a spare then lemme know :man:
edit: they only in white? would surely get filthy!
A Nook running Android makes the Kindle Paperwhite look like a proper paperweight.
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/hack-your-nook-simple-touch-into-a-super-e-reader-in-three-easy-steps/
Only downside was that the buttons didn't work.
edit:
Worst case, it may be possible to remove the DRM and put it on the Nook for use with it's native app.
They wanted clarification as per the below:
:-)
Interesting enough, both comments followed each other in the Thread above ..... lol.
There are ways round this, but if you are expecting this to work out of the box - you maybe disappointed :-(
So great price for a great device, just research the offline registration first.
You don't really need updates for this, you can just root it and install Google Play on this!
Then you can install apps like Cool Reader or Moon+ Reader Pro (if you got it for 10p when it was on sale) for PDF support.