Pandigital Novel (black)
As shown: $199.99
See manufacturer site for availability
CNET Editors' Review
CNET Editors' Rating
- Reviewed by: David Carnoy
- Reviewed on:
The good: E-book reader with color touch screen; built-in Wi-Fi; access to Barnes & Noble eBook store; SD expansion slot for additional memory; Web browser and e-mail capabilities; displays images and some video formats; support for audio and MP3 playback.
The bad: Resistive touch-screen is problematic; extremely sluggish performance; interface could be more intuitive; overall user experience could be better.
The bottom line: The feature set of the affordable Pandigital Novel looks good on paper, but this color e-book reader and multimedia device is hobbled by its extremely slow performance and unresponsive touch screen.
If you know of Pandigital, you probably know it for its photo frames. However, the company is moving into the hot e-book reader market with a device that a lot of people have been waiting for: an affordable color-screen e-book reader with ties to a major bookseller.
Integrated with the Barnes & Noble's e-book store, the Pandigital Novel is an Android-powered e-book reader that has a full-color 7-inch touch-screen display, Wi-Fi connectivity, and multimedia capabilities. On the surface, this all sounds pretty good and when we first saw a picture of it it, we thought it looked a lot like ... Expand full review
If you know of Pandigital, you probably know it for its photo frames. However, the company is moving into the hot e-book reader market with a device that a lot of people have been waiting for: an affordable color-screen e-book reader with ties to a major bookseller.
Integrated with the Barnes & Noble's e-book store, the Pandigital Novel is an Android-powered e-book reader that has a full-color 7-inch touch-screen display, Wi-Fi connectivity, and multimedia capabilities. On the surface, this all sounds pretty good and when we first saw a picture of it it, we thought it looked a lot like the rumored smaller version of the iPad. The product is available in white and black versions for less than $200. You can find the Novel discounted to $169--or even less--at stores such as J.C. Penney and Bed, Bath, & Beyond.
Alas, the Novel, at least in its current state, has some issues that seriously hamper the device. For starters, while the Novel's 800x600-pixel resolution display is adequate, its sharpness level will probably disappoint anybody with a 2010 smartphone. More importantly, its resistive touch-screen interface isn't nearly as responsive as the iPad's capacitive touch-screen interface and the touch-screen interfaces of all those new smartphones (and the iPod Touch).
The device also feels underpowered. An Arm 11 processor powers the Novel, which measures 7.5 inches tall by 5.5 inches wide by 0.5 inch thick and weighs 16 ounces. It has 1GB of built-in memory and has an expansion slot for SD/MMC memory cards--with support for cards up to 32GB in capacity. Pandigital rates its Novel's battery life at 6 hours in reading mode. That's not terrible, but it's neither near the iPad's battery life nor the battery life of dedicated e-ink-based e-book readers, such as the Amazon Kindle or Barnes & Noble Nook, that don't have to be recharged for days or even weeks. (Charging is accomplished via the included Mini-USB cable and AC adapter; the rechargeable lithium ion battery is sealed and nonremovable.)
While the Novel has multimedia features as well as a built-in Web browser, e-mail client, calendar, and alarm, Pandigital is billing its new devices first and foremost as an e-book reader, touting its "easy access to Barnes & Noble's expansive eBookstore catalog of more than one million eBooks, newspapers and magazines, a wide variety of free eBooks and more than half a million free classics." Novel users can also use Barnes & Noble's LendMe feature that lets you share certain e-books with friends and family for 14 days; however, currently you can only lend a book out once.
Using the built-in Wi-Fi connection, you can browse and purchase e-books from the Barnes & Noble e-book store or import your own EPUB or PDF files. (You can drag and drop files from any connected Windows PC or Mac, or load them onto an SD card.) Once you get an e-book loaded, it's not half bad to read on (so long as you aren't in bright sunlight). It's also got the normal e-reader bells and whistles: adjustable font sizes, built-in dictionary, highlights, and notes. And the device automatically switches from portrait to landscape mode when tilted--but it's so sensitive, it sometime made the switch when we didn't want it to; an external lock switch (as found on the iPad) would be a nice addition here.
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Hunkered down in New York City, Executive Editor David Carnoy covers the gamut of gadgets and writes his Fully Equipped column, which carries the tag line "The electronics you lust for." He's also the author of "Knife Music," a novel that's available at Amazon, bn.com, and as a Kindle, iBooks, or Nook e-book.
User Reviews
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Most Helpful User Review
stars 5 of 5 users found this review helpful
"Good tablet/e-reader out-of-the-box, with more to come." By edogCO
Pros No 'walled garden' so can easily access my current library and add more thru expansion SD-slot.
User-replaceable battery. Internal memory upgradeable to at least 16GB.
Cons Slower, resistive touchscreen, but sensitivity seems to improve with each firmware upgrade (latest 8/6/10).
File system to handle large amounts of media files could be better, more like an mp3-player.
Summary Functions well as an e-reader, out-of-the box from Pandigital. MUCH less-expensive than units with similar capabilities, and seems to have good support for enhancements by mfg and on-line community. NOT an iPad, but a worthy alternative that should improve with future firmware releases and user hacks.
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Specifications
See full specsQuick Specs
- OS provided: Android
- Wireless connectivity: IEEE 802.11n IEEE 802.11b IEEE 802.11g
- Display type: 7 in Color TFT active matrix