Nielson's survey suggests that paper books are easier to read than iPad books:  readers of iPad books read 6.2% slower.  However, Kindle readers were 10.2% slower than paper readers.  Oddly, both the Kindle and the iPad users rated the experience more enjoyably than paper (the iPad>Kindle>paper scores were 5.8, 5.7, and 5.6;  it was a close match, and one wonders about novelty effects – the scores were, after all, in order of device novelty, and relatedly but differently, in order of gizmo sexiness).
iPad also gets top marks for making the computer experience a lot simpler than it used to be.  This review pretty much sums up why Apple is able to reach people who never were interested in computers:  you don't need to be interested in computers, only in your music or your email or your photos the internet or the like.  This is virtually the hallmark of a well-designed tool:  you don't notice it really when you use it, just the power it lends you.
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