Includes Kobo Stylus 2 with USB-C charging and magnetic docking.Native support for EPUB, EPUB3, FlePub, PDF, MOBI, JPEG, GIF, PNG, BMP, TIFF, TXT, HTML, RTF, CBZ, CBR and Kobo Audiobooks.Kobo TypeGenius with 12 fonts and 50+ font styles.ComfortLight PRO with adjustable brightness and color temperature.USB-C port for charging and PC connectivity. 10.3-inch E Ink Carta 1200 touchscreen display with Dark Mode.Also, the Elipsa 2E lacks water resistance, so no reading in the bath tub. Its only downsides as an eReader are a size that makes it too large to slip in a pocket, a 227 PPI display that is not quite as crisp as Kobo’s other models (the Sage display is 300 PPI), and the lack of physical page turn buttons. The Elipsa 2E also dwarfs the 8-inch Kobo Sage, making it an eReader giant Brad Moon If you have been looking for an eReader with a bigger display so it’s more like a digital hardcover in size than a paperback (with the option of displaying more text or larger text on a page), the Kobo Elipsa 2E is well worth checking out. It incorporates the full range of features found on the company’s best eReaders, including TypeGenius (for virtually limitless page customization), Dark Mode, OverDrive integration (the eBook platform used by most public libraries) and ComfortLight PRO that adjusts both brightness and color temperature of the lighting. Kobo makes excellent eReaders and the Elipsa 2E follows in that tradition. The stylus is comfortable to hold, while writing on the display feels quite natural with instant response and just enough resistance that the tip doesn’t feel like it’s skating on glass. I far preferred the Basic notes mode, which acts as an old school notepad with no attempts at digital magic – other than converting a notebook to a digital format (such as PDF). Handwriting conversion can be hit or miss Brad Moon
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