
The Nook's home screen rotates into landscape or portrait mode, depending on how you hold the device. If you receive a notification, its icon appears in the middle of the status bar. Tapping the gear icon next to the Wi-Fi icon reveals a quick settings menu that allows you to control the brightness, quickly change Wi-Fi status or toggle Airplane mode. A status bar at the top of the screen shows your clock, Wi-Fi connection and battery level. Once logged in, the Nook HD+ presents you with a desktop with a small carousel on top that allows you to flip through thumbnails of your most recently used apps and content. Ideal for families, the Nook HD has a lock screen that shows a list of registered users for the tablet and lets you log into your own account by swiping toward your photo.
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The Kindle Fire HD's stereo speakers and their Dolby Digital technology offer far better audio.Ĭlick to EnlargeLike the Nook HD, the HD+ runs the Nook OS 2, a heavily skinned version of Android 4 that focuses on media consumption, especially reading. However, users must be careful because the speaker is located in the lower right corner of the back, a place where it's far too easy to block with your hand.
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When we listened to both the bass-heavy "Forget Me Nots" and the hard rock "Cult of Personality," music was flat but completely free from distortion. The Nook HD+'s single rear-facing speaker provides audio that's accurate and loud enough to fill a small room. When we played an "Avengers" trailer on the Nook and put it next to a fourth-generation iPad playing the same clip, colors like the red in the Marvel logo or the gray in an overcast sky seemed a bit more vibrant on the Nook, but more true-to-life on the iPad. When viewed from 180 degrees to the left or right, colors stayed true on the Nook HD+ but were masked by a lot of reflections on the Kindle's glossier display.

When we watched the same scene from the "The Avengers" on both the HD+ and an Amazon Kindle Fire HD+, colors like the blue in Captain America's costume or the red in Black Widow's hair were noticeably more vibrant on the Nook. Specs aside, the Nook HD+ provided one of the sharpest, most-colorful pictures we've seen from a tablet.

With a brightness of 456 lux on our light meter, the HD+ is about the same brightness as the Kindle Fire HD (454 lux), but significantly brighter than the iPad (346 lux).

That's nearly identical to the Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9's 254 PPI and just behind the fourth-generation iPad's 264 PPI. Click to EnlargeThe Nook HD+'s 9-inch screen carries a higher-than-full-HD resolution of 1920 x 1280, a pixel density of 256 PPI.
