Txtr beagle: new £8 Kindle rival

ReenaSewraz
by Lovemoney Staff ReenaSewraz on 16 October 2012  |  Comments 14 comments

Looking for a cheaper alternative to the Amazon Kindle? Well the txtr beagle e-reader will only cost £8. But there's a catch.

Txtr beagle: new £8 Kindle rival

A Berlin based company called txtr is poised to launch a new device that is likely to shake up the whole e-reader market.

The txtr beagle could soon pose a real threat to market leaders like Amazon.

So what has this new challenger got to offer?

The price is right

Well the price is very low. The UK price will be just £8.

That massively undercuts Amazon’s bottom of the range Kindle (£69), the Kobo Mini (£59.99), the Nook Simple Touch e-reader (£79) as well as the Sony PRS-T2 (£119).

But what exactly do you get for this rock bottom price?

No frills

txtr has adopted a bare bones approach and stripped back the e-reader technology to its most basic elements.

The beagle isn’t Wi-Fi enabled, is unable to connect to the 3G network and doesn’t have a rechargeable battery. Instead you need to have a smartphone to transmit up to five books via Bluetooth to the reader and two AAA batteries power the device (enough power to get through 12-15 books a year). The Kindle, by contrast can store 1400 books.

Instead of a touch screen, the device has buttons to turn pages meaning just about everything - including the size of the font - is set on the smartphone before you download the book.

But not all bad

Where the beagle does perform competitively is in size and basic function.

The beagle will be the lightest reader on the market. Weighing in at just 128 grams, it's 42 grams lighter than the Kindle.

It's also small enough to fit into the palm of your hand and transport in a bag or pocket. The device is only 4.8mm thick at its slimmest point but does have a little bulge at the bottom for the batteries.

The product has a five inch screen and like other e-readers uses E-Ink technology to give the sharpest display. Furthermore, the device supports both .pdf and .epub book formats, along with all the others normally supported by a smartphone.

What about the books?

The number of devices out there is vast and their fancy features numerous, but what it really comes down to is what sort of books you can get to read on them.

Consumer champion Which? has reviewed the best eBook stores and generally Amazon's Kindle store scores best.

The txtr bookstore already holds 400,000 titles but that seems like nothing compared to the Kindle Store’s 900,000. That said, my search of a few classics and best sellers didn’t find anything txtr didn’t have - but I guess that will depend on taste.

George Orwell’s 1984 cost £6.99 from the Kindle store but was slightly cheaper on txtr which had the classic novel for £5.49.

However, the first part of the hugely popular trilogy, The Hunger Games, retails for just £2.87 with Amazon but was a costly £6.99 with txtr.

Meanwhile, new title The Casual Vacancy by JK Rowling is the same price across both eBook stores at £11.99.

What’s not to like?

The txtr is just a simple no frills e-reader that simplifies the technology rather than complicates it. Many who hate over-complicated gadgets could warm to this product especially at such a reasonable price. But there is just one problem.

The catch

You won’t be able to get the txtr beagle as a standalone product just yet. Instead the plan is to distribute it as an accessory on smartphone mobile phone contracts.

I can understand why txtr is taking this approach, after all it's reliant on a smartphone for transfers, but I'm still disappointed that txtr isn't brave enough to launch the product on its own.

Txtr hope to bring the product to the UK at the beginning of next year but were unable to comment on which mobile phone operators were in the pipeline to offer the device with their contracts.

Verdict

A cheap model that sacrifices a few fancy features is not a big concern but the tie-in with a mobile phone contract is.

But should the beagle be sold separately, then I think the heavyweights like Amazon and Apple could have a lot to worry about.

What do you think?

Would you take out a contract phone to get a hold of this e-reader or would you prefer to just buy a cheap standalone product? Let us know in the Comment boxes below.

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Comments (14)

  • CuNNaXXa
    Love rating 362
    CuNNaXXa said

    Talking of SmartPhones, I can get one entirely free, but I must subscribe to a 24 month phone contract to qualify for this FREE phone.

    In other words, it is NOT free, nor is the txtr beagle only £8. The moment conditions are applied, we can forget the basic cost.

    Oh, and because it is tied in with a phone contract, you will probably see all the major phone providers offering this piece of technology with their latest SmartPhones, either as a freebie, or as the £8 addition as advertised in the headline of this article.

    As for me, I will stick with my last generation, non touch, Kindle. It does everything it was promoted as doing, is easy to read, and lasts ages on a single USB charge. In fact, I find the Dictionary excellent when playing Scrabble with my family. No more flicking through thousands of pages of definitions. Just SEARCH for the word.

    Oh, and for anyone who has never experienced the Electronic Ink screen these possess, they are vastly superior to phone and computer screens for purely reading purposes. You can read for hours using e-Ink as it is non glare, whereas a computer screen or phone screen can give eye strain.

    Report on 20 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Tujags
    Love rating 1
    Tujags said

    Sounds good if that's all you want, I 've just bought a basic 7" Android tablet & a 16gB memory card from ebay for £55 which does a heck of a lot more & has WiFi, a camera for Skype etc will accept a dongle for 3g if needed.

    & all the downloadable apps BBC iplayer etc. Seems great value works well so for me would be a better buy.

    Report on 01 November 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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