The iriver Story HD’s physical presence is a bit startling for 2011. It’s not that the Story HD’s design is totally outdated, but it certainly fails to move the hardware story of ereaders forward in any significant way. The front of the device boasts a 6-inch (768 x 1024 resolution) E Ink screen, a full, tobacco-colored keyboard with 38 tiny capsule-like keys, and one metal hardware rocker for navigational use, plus dedicated home, back, enter and option keys. The back of the device is a golden brown plastic, with the power button on the bottom left hand corner and the SD slot right above it. It’s a simple affair, and a light one, too — the entire package weighs in at 7.3 oz — less than both the latest Nook (7.48 oz) and the current generation Kindle (8.5 oz). The keyboard looks like it won’t be the greatest for typing, but I found it to be surprisingly comfortable and accurate. The branded home, back, enter, and option buttons also work just fine, are easy to find just by feel after a few minutes of use, and all of them have a nice tactile response. The device can hold up to 32GB with an SD card (with 2GB on board). Battery life is excellent as is the case with most E ink readers, and I haven’t even made a dent in it in almost a week of decently solid use (several hours a day — I like to read a lot), so I’ll take iriver on its word when it says the Story HD gets up to six weeks on standby.
The same can’t be said for the metal, four-way rocker in the center of the device that is used mainly for menu navigation and page turns. The button itself is placed just fine, but it feels a bit mushy and occasionally misses a press here or there, causing some momentary confusion in the device’s ability to update on cue. There’s one other major gripe from the hardware perspective, and it’s not a completely minor one. The review unit arrived boxed with two very nice, branded iriver covers, and the device fits nicely into both. However, in order to wake the device from its sleep mode, you have to slide the power button on the back of it, meaning you have to physically remove the reader from the case to do so — not ideal from a design or use perspective, and in practice, it’s pretty annoying. The best part of this device is, of course, the very high resolution of its screen, and reading on the device is quite enjoyable. The text is noticeably crisper than the Nook or Kindle, which both have a lower resolution. Page refresh is on par with the recent Kindle (and only slightly slower than the Wi-Fi Nook), and that boosted number of pixels makes for a crisp reading experience. Other than that, though the hardware is very basic and certainly not high end by any means, the overall design of the reader is perfectly functional, intuitive, and has a nice feel in the hand. No, it’s not reinventing the wheel of ereader design, but the thin and light slab with screen and keyboard seems to be the right wheel to begin with, so we’re just fine with that. The general build quality of it is fairly high, though pushing on the corners of the device a bit does produce some creaking.
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