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Kobo Aura H20 Edition 2

Kobo ’s heading poolside with its latest waterprof ereader, but will it sink or swim? Time for a dip

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Kobo’s new waterproof ereader promises to be your new best friend for the poolside (or British rainstorms).

Are you ‘beach book ready’? That’s the question Kobo’s asking with its latest ereader, the Aura H2O Edition 2. Based on the original Aura H2O, but drawing upon tech from the Aura One, this new edition focuses on maximising reading comfort while cultivatin­g a customisab­le experience.

It’s dust-resistant, with 8GB of storage for holding up to 6,000 ebooks, and has an HZO Protection waterproof coating. It has a blue on/off button at the back, with page turns and customisat­ion functions taking place onscreen.

The new Aura H2O feels light (210g) and comfortabl­e to hold. It has a 6.8-inch screen, compared to the Aura One’s 7.8-inch screen, displaying print-quality text at 265ppi (300ppi on the Aura One). The Carta E Ink touchscree­n display has a paper-esque feel and look, and is visible in bright daylight. The main attraction, though, is the Aura One’s brilliant ComfortLig­ht PRO tech.

ComfortLig­ht PRO cuts blue-light exposure and protects your eyes from the strain of reading at night. It uses an ambient light sensor to determine how bright your screen should be, automatica­lly mimicking the sun’s progressio­n and adjusting the display’s brightness and hue as the day moves on – at night it has a gentle, candleligh­t hue.

Other aspects can also be customised, via a feature called TypeGenius. You can choose from 11 font types and 50 font sizes, adjust page margins and write notes within them, plus highlight passages and look up words via the built-in dictionary. We were also able to adjust sharpness, colour temperatur­e and lighting settings. The Aura H2O was a little sluggish in responding to our taps, but the customisat­ion menu was simple to navigate once inside.

The biggest draw is its claim of being waterproof (IPX8). Kobo says it can be submerged, without port covers, for up to an hour in up to two metres of water. We dropped it into a warm bath on several occasions, each time leaving it to ‘soak’ longer. When we retrieved the Aura H2O, it was in perfect working order.

While the Aura H2O takes some tech from the Aura One, it hasn’t inherited its battery life. Kobo states a noncommitt­al “weeks of battery life on a single charge”. Starting fully charged, we had some charge remaining after two weeks of testing.

Buying the new Aura H2O comes down to whether you already own an ereader and what level of importance you place on features such as it being waterproof and having blue-light reduction tech. If you’re sans ereader and want something more affordable than Kobo and Amazon’s flagship devices, especially one that will survive a bath-time accident and won’t disturb your sleep cycle, the Aura H2O is worth splashing out on.

 ??  ?? ABOVE Kobo’s newest ereader loves holidays so much it’ll even join you in the pool ABOVE right Its blue on/ off button is on the back, but everything else happens onscreen
ABOVE Kobo’s newest ereader loves holidays so much it’ll even join you in the pool ABOVE right Its blue on/ off button is on the back, but everything else happens onscreen
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