I've used Pocketbook for years. Durable equipment, good battery, simple but robust OS. The company was first founded in Kyiv and then moved its headquarters to Switzerland. Production, to the best of my knowledge, is in Taiwan. Highly recommended.
For those who have an Amazon Kindle, it's currently possible to jailbreak almost all Kindle models, thanks to a new jailbreaking tool released earlier this year. That includes the latest generation devices, as long as they haven't been updated to the latest firmware that was released last month.
Jailbreaking basically lets you de-Amazon your Kindle. You can replace the default user interface and reader app with KOReader, which is more feature rich. This video shows some of the features that KOReader has and some other things you can do with jailbroken Kindle: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qtk7ERwlIAk
I use a Vivlio, sold by Cultura.
Very simple and light. The battery lasts forever.
I only read epub books that are in the public domain, which is a lot and completely free
You might also check out inkBOOK (inkbook.eu), a Polish company. I'm currently using their focus model which features a large (7.8'') display, and I'm very happy with it.
I ordered their Solaris model and I should get it by the end of next week. I have a Storytel subscription and Finland, where I live, has a library app where you can loan ebooks as well, so I am very excited about being able to access them from my ereader.
It's good to hear you've been liking yours as it was very hard to find reviews, but I really wanted to support an EU company and ended up going for it anyway!
I'd heard about reMarkable but not sure if it's exactly a kindle competitor. Also uses e-ink but it heard more towards taking notes. Far as I can tell it created the segment that the kinda Scribe competes in.
I have a remarkable 2. Two of them actually after I killed the first one by sitting on it 😳
They are excellent note-takers. There’s no on device OCR and search of notes, that relies on their cloud service. Writing on it is the closest to writing on paper I’ve found on a eDevice.
It’s a terrible ebook reader. Everything gets converted to PDF internally and the UI is designed around annotation and note taking, not uninterrupted reading.