
When playing a video, this battery life fell to five hours and 42 minutes. With the device set to the default settings for screen brightness, we were able to read an eBook for just over seven and a half hours. While the LCD screen gives it the ability to play back video, we found that it also made the battery life shorter when reading an eBook or listening to music. We found mixed results in our battery tests on the Nook Color. Here we see a Lightning dock in its natural habitat.
Nook color note taking app for free#
One interesting thing to note here is that the device allows for free use of WiFi at Barnes & Noble stores, and you can also use this to read books for free: Barnes & Noble allows you to read any eBook they sell for an hour a day for free in their stores. It does not include a 3G data connection to use elsewhere, though. The Nook Color includes a WiFi connection (802.11n) that can be used to both browse the web and buy books within range of a wireless network. It does offer an audible click for feedback when it detects a key touch, but this often seems to lag from the keypress by a half second or so, which is extremely disorientating. This is acceptable for entering short pieces of text (such as book titles or author names), but it is too small for long-term use.

Text is entered into the device through an on-screen keyboard. Books are easy to control: a touch on the right side of the screen goes to the next page, while a touch on the left side goes back a page. Those with familiarity with Google's Andriod operating system will feel instantly at home, because the Nook Color runs a version of this OS tweaked for eBook use. We found that the touch screen interface worked well, with the screne accurately detecting the touches and a logical layout.
