Transformer (Score: 1) by bryan@pipedot.org on 2014-10-20 21:49 (#2THE) I prefer portrait mode when the tablet is alone. But with the ASUS Transformer, I often have the tablet attached to its keyboard dock - which pretty much locks it into landscape mode. Re: Transformer (Score: 1) by zocalo@pipedot.org on 2014-10-21 12:22 (#2THZ) Similar here, although even without the keyboard I tend to surf the web, read email etc. in landscape mode. I generally only use portrait mode when I'm reading an eBook (for which I always remove the keyboard and use portrait mode) or for some web sites, or even specific articles, that I think work better that way around. Probably that's just pre-conditioning on my part and that of web site designers; we're still used to the landscape orientation of desktop monitor being the norm, even though some recent web stats imply that most browsing for some sites is now done via phones and tablets. Re: Transformer (Score: 1) by tanuki64@pipedot.org on 2014-10-21 14:26 (#2TJ5) I use my tablet (Galaxy Note 10.2) almost only to read eBooks (>90%). I always read in landscape mode if the format is epub. This way I have two pages open in almost the same size as when I read a normal paper pocket book. Of course, technical literature in pdf format I usually read in portrait mode. Whatever works best.Btw...when I bought my tablet a few years ago, I tested quite a few readers. At that time cool reader was the best I found:http://coolreader.org/e-index.htmMaybe in the meantime a better one was released, but I am still happy enough with this one that I feel no pressure to search foralternatives. One of the best features: It is open source.
Re: Transformer (Score: 1) by zocalo@pipedot.org on 2014-10-21 12:22 (#2THZ) Similar here, although even without the keyboard I tend to surf the web, read email etc. in landscape mode. I generally only use portrait mode when I'm reading an eBook (for which I always remove the keyboard and use portrait mode) or for some web sites, or even specific articles, that I think work better that way around. Probably that's just pre-conditioning on my part and that of web site designers; we're still used to the landscape orientation of desktop monitor being the norm, even though some recent web stats imply that most browsing for some sites is now done via phones and tablets. Re: Transformer (Score: 1) by tanuki64@pipedot.org on 2014-10-21 14:26 (#2TJ5) I use my tablet (Galaxy Note 10.2) almost only to read eBooks (>90%). I always read in landscape mode if the format is epub. This way I have two pages open in almost the same size as when I read a normal paper pocket book. Of course, technical literature in pdf format I usually read in portrait mode. Whatever works best.Btw...when I bought my tablet a few years ago, I tested quite a few readers. At that time cool reader was the best I found:http://coolreader.org/e-index.htmMaybe in the meantime a better one was released, but I am still happy enough with this one that I feel no pressure to search foralternatives. One of the best features: It is open source.
Re: Transformer (Score: 1) by tanuki64@pipedot.org on 2014-10-21 14:26 (#2TJ5) I use my tablet (Galaxy Note 10.2) almost only to read eBooks (>90%). I always read in landscape mode if the format is epub. This way I have two pages open in almost the same size as when I read a normal paper pocket book. Of course, technical literature in pdf format I usually read in portrait mode. Whatever works best.Btw...when I bought my tablet a few years ago, I tested quite a few readers. At that time cool reader was the best I found:http://coolreader.org/e-index.htmMaybe in the meantime a better one was released, but I am still happy enough with this one that I feel no pressure to search foralternatives. One of the best features: It is open source.