The tablet

iPad

At the iPadโ€™s release, it was among only a handful of tablets, and their versatility, color touchscreens, and media options clearly distinguished them from e-readers with their black-and-white displays designed to mimic print publications. If youโ€™ve yet to decide whether an e-reader or a tablet is right for you, there has never been a more confusing time. Tablets, such as the iPad, offer full-color touchpad screens that bring Star Trekโ€™s PADD device to life. Grab a movie off iTunes, or download the Netflix app, and your tablet is a portable home theater system. And, yes, you can download books and turn it into an e-reader, but itโ€™s a very expensive e-reader. If an e-reader is a 2009 Toyota Camry, an iPad is a 2012 Lamborghini. They will both get you from Point A to Point B, but the iPad will get you there faster, with more bells and whistles, and turn a few heads on the road as you watch your bank account drain, Starting at $499; Apple.com/ipad.

The e-reader

Nook Color

Barnes and Nobleโ€™s color e-reader recently updated its operating system (OS) to run a modified Android OS. Itโ€™s not the Android that many new tablets are running today, but the change brought apps an improved web browser and email client to the Nook Color, morphing it from a $249 e-reader into a $249 mock-tabletโ€”emphasis on the โ€œmock.โ€ The slow processor will give some people 14.4 Kbps flashbacks, the app store doesnโ€™t offer Netflix or Hulu, and there is no 3G connectivity, so youโ€™re cut off unless you have wi-fi. Still, the Nook Color supports almost every e-book format so regardless of where you purchase a novel, Nook Color can display itโ€”something the iPad and Kindle are hard pressed to claim. In the end, Nook Color is a fancy, touchscreen e-reader but nothing more. However, if youโ€™re more interested in learning why the caged bird sings than making the birds angry, a flashy e-reader may be the ticket. $249; bn.com/nookcolor.

The hybrid

Kindle Fire

The Nook Colorโ€™s Android update went a long way to bridge the gap between e-reader and tablet, but on Sept. 28, Amazon seemingly dammed the river and bulldozed over the gap entirely. Kindle Fire, set for release on Nov. 15, has a 7-inch color touchscreen and a dual core processor to take full advantage of the Amazon Appstore and Amazon Instant Video, which has more than 100,000 movies and TV shows. Kindle Fire is just under $200. Kindle Fire seems the perfect hybrid. All of the media, browsing and gaming of a tablet with Amazonโ€™s e-book library behind it. The latter may be the most important factor. Since this is Amazonโ€™s device, they can push it and its content in the same way Apple works with iTunes/iBooks. Kindle Fire wonโ€™t burn up the iPad, but it will provide an affordable alternative for people who want the speed, Flash (pun intended), and content of a tablet without the sports car lifestyle or bank account. $199; Amazon.com/kindlefire.

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