![]() ![]() Where you pay for these Kindle-beating bits is in the screen. There’s a microSD memory card slot on the left edge if the 2GB of internal memory isn’t enough (pro tip: it probably is) and the Kobo Glo can handle the EPUB files that let you lend ebooks from public libraries. The Kobo Glo also offers a couple of extra features you don’t get with thr Amazon Kindle Paperwhite. Like the Amazon Kindle Touch, it’s a design success. ![]() As such, it’s critical that the ereader rests happily in your palm, leaving you thumb free for page-turn duties – and it does. With no nav buttons on the Kobo Glo whatsoever, all page turning and navigation is done using the touchscreen. ![]() Weighing 185g, it’s noticeably trimmer and is the lightest ereader with a front-lite screen you can get in the UK. It is markedly lighter than a Amazon Kindle Paperwhite, though. The Kobo Glo has relatively severe edges, and its soft touch finish isn’t quite as velvety soft as some of the competition. It’s quirkier and friendlier-looking than the Kindle family, but ergonomically it isn’t quite as good. The texture of the Kobo Glo’s rear is different from the Kobo eReader Touch’s too, ditching the quilted contouring but keeping a diamond-shaped pattern, this time made up of thin lines cut into the back. Consequently, there’s more scope for people to find them objectionable, and to our eyes the silver model does not look great. It comes in four shades, blue, red, silver and black, although the pastel shades of the Kobo eReader Touch have been swapped for more vivid colours. The front and sides are a single piece of moulded plastic – either black or white – and the rear is a panel of slightly soft touch plastic. The look of the Kobo Glo is much like its predecessor’s, though. Like the Amazon Kindle Paperwhite and Nook GlowLight, the Kobo Glo features a front-lit screen, letting you read in the dark without a bedside light. Kobo has updated the eReader Touch design with the Kobo Glo. It was cuter-looking than the Kindle, had a more fun-filled interface and let you read the EPUB books that Amazon’s range didn’t, and doesn’t support. Last year, Kobo made a splash on the ereader scene with the great Kobo eReader Touch. All it lacks is the magic of the Kindle ebook-buying system. It’s £10 cheaper than the top Kindle, more flexible in some respects and is a darn good ereader. First on the scene was the wonderful Amazon Kindle Paperwhite, and now Kobo has responded with the Kobo Glo. The next step in the evolution of the E-ink ereader is not, as some expected, colour screens but integrated lights. ![]()
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