Original URL: https://www.theregister.com/2013/09/04/barnes_noble_knocks_nook_slates_down_to_79/

Barnes & Noble knock Nook slate down to £79

Readily rootable seven-inch Android slate, anyone?

By Tony Smith

Posted in Personal Tech, 4th September 2013 11:24 GMT

Barnes & Noble has knocked a further 20 quid off the price of its Nook HD and HD+ tablets as it continues to try to shift existing stocks of the gadgets.

Originally introduced in September 2012, the 7-inch and 9-inch Nook tablets were priced at launch at £159 for a 16GB HD and £226 for the same-capacity HD+. Both tablets, intended to compete head-to-head with Amazon’s Kindle Fire family, were praised for their higher-than-par resolution screens: 1440 x 900 on HD, and 1920 x 1080 on the larger HD+.

You can now get the 16GB HD for £99 and and an 8GB model for a mere £79. The 16GB HD+ is now £129, the 32GB version £149. Shipping is free. Both have Micro SD slots for extra storage space.

B&N is warning potential buyers that the (even) cheaper tablets are only available “while supplies last”, but having been rapped on the knuckles by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) for causing would-be buyers bother and fuss the last time it slashed prices, hopefully this time the devices should be more readily available.

Back in April, B&N reduced the price of its Nook e-reader to £29, again “while stocks last”. Many, many folk tried to avail themselves of one only to find they’d all gone in moments of the offer becoming known. The bookseller was told by the ASA it should have anticipated the demand such a price promotion would create and ensure it had sufficient stock to meet that demand.

Anyone who manages to acquire the lower-priced Nooks may be pleased to know both devices can be converted to stock Android using the CyanogenMod firmware hack. ®