With a Kindle, you can only download a book a limited number of times (it’s different for each book, and they never tell you up front what the limit is). So, in the event of a crash, failure or replacement, you may end up having to buy a whole bunch of books all over again.
iPads don’t have replacable batteries. When yours fails, you sent it back to Apple with a hundred bucks and they send you a new one - with none of your files or applications on board.
There’s too much room for big brotherism with ereaders.
With a Kindle, you can only download a book a limited number of times (it’s different for each book, and they never tell you up front what the limit is). So, in the event of a crash, failure or replacement, you may end up having to buy a whole bunch of books all over again.
iPads don’t have replacable batteries. When yours fails, you sent it back to Apple with a hundred bucks and they send you a new one - with none of your files or applications on board.
There’s too much room for big brotherism with ereaders.