In the market for a new laptop or perhaps a Microsoft Surface-like tablet style system? Well, Star Labs have turned their StarLite laptop into a tablet.
I'm genuinely intrigued by the potential use cases for this Linux tablet.
In my opinion:
It's too large to fit comfortably in a pocket, necessitating some form of bag for transport;
It's too large to hold comfortably on the sofa, such as when reading an ebook;
It seems underpowered for its size;
The keyboard quality appears subpar for a device of this size (I haven't tried it, but we all know how these keyboards typically feel);
It won't replace a smartphone and therefore won't take over its casual entertainment tasks;
For casual tech activities, I have a Pinephone with a keyboard. Despite the phone's lack of power and the keyboard's quality, its portability and form factor are hard to beat.
It's the 3 book set on kindle so Goodeads* has it at 3800 pages. Unfortunately it doesn't give page numbers in book, which I find super annoying. I've been working on it since 4th of July weekend, but because most of the time I have to read is audiobooks while doing other stuff, progress takes forever.
The beauty of the large device is less about fiction, though. I also prefer it there, but being able to fit 2 pages of textbooks/programming books that rely on more structured formatting is where it really shines. (I do regret taking the heavy discount on the Max instead of paying for the sidelit Lumi, though. Needing lighting can be annoying at times.)
On topic, it really is perfectly comfortable to hold. While I do rest it in my lap a lot and set it up with a stand on a table occasionally, I have no issue with holding it either. It takes the second hand to turn pages if you hold it one handed but the actual holding it feels fine, and definitely better than a textbook in your lap.
Have you tried Storygraph? That's what I've switched to and it can do 99% of the functionality I used on Goodreads just as well, the only thing missing for me is a similar setup for grouping books into multiple custom-ordered lists, but that wasn't a critical feature for me.
Lists are the main reason everything else is broken. I have a list of 100-something nonfiction and a second list of 50-something books I consider high quality books on intelligence/what makes us tick/what we'll need for AI that I'm not willing to give up and I'm not willing to manually type one at a time to import somewhere else. I also have 500-something mysteries just to split those out from everything else, but that one's sloppier and less maintained and I don't care about it.
Eventually, I probably am going to manually do a lot of cleanup, but I'd rather do it when I'm ready to self host so I can completely structure the data the way I want. None of them really let you treat series as first class citizens either, which is how I'd prefer to organize my fiction. I'd prefer to display my fiction or sub-categories as "Karen Rose's Romantic Suspense", "Lee Child's Jack Reacher", "Brandon Sanderson's Stormlight Archive", "CJ Archer's Glass and Steele" etc, and do a couple paragraphs on the style of each. I don't want to do that for all 10-30 books in each series.
I don't get it. I loved my 8" tablet, but they are extinct. I bought a 10" tablet but it is too big to use for a tablet. Who the hell is buying these 12" tablets.