This is highly interesting. Not just for a notepad, but also potentially for a reader. This is only 350 grams, not much heavier than an iPad Mini, but much bigger. And harder to break too, due to no glass.
And the video image may fool me here, but it looks like the background is closer to white than earlier E-ink displays. If that's so, I consider that quite important.
eReaderJoy: thoughts and news from Eolake Stobblehouse about the wonderful new platform of tablets and e-reading devices. Some say, one of the biggest advances to reading since Gutenberg (Okay, I said that).
In e-form, books have never been wider, cheaper or faster available, easier to understand, use, and carry, or more comfortable to read.
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Hybrid displays
I have long had a feeling that eventually and maybe pretty soon, we will have displays which combine the advantages of LCD (color, clarity, speed) with those of e-ink (less eye-stress, better outdoors, longer battery life). There really wouldn't be any need to buy and carry two devices if the various strengths can be combined in one.
It seems progress is made, though it's unclear how far this is from market-mature.
Thanks to The Kindle Chronicles (and thanks for the testimonial, Len!). Len wonders if this kind of technology will end up being another nail in the coffin of long-form reading. Well... first of all, like Len says, it's gonna happen, so we'll have to deal with it somehow. Second, if one needs one's books to be on a separate, "dumb" device in order not to be distracted by Angry Avians and Tweets (angry or not), then I'd consider the problem being in the reader rather than the device.
And by the way, if enough people have that problem, there will probably still be some devices made which are only ereaders, not multi-purpose devices.
The question is of course if the market is big enough. Note for example that there has never been a successful "typewriter" type laptop, despite many writers wanting one. And that's probably because the number of people who'd want such a limited device is too small.
(The Alphasmart Neo by the way is very close, you can only write on it, not even format anything, and the keyboard is great, better than on any notebook I've tried. But to my taste, it's hobbled by a too-low-contrast display, like the Kindle was until last year.)
It seems progress is made, though it's unclear how far this is from market-mature.
Thanks to The Kindle Chronicles (and thanks for the testimonial, Len!). Len wonders if this kind of technology will end up being another nail in the coffin of long-form reading. Well... first of all, like Len says, it's gonna happen, so we'll have to deal with it somehow. Second, if one needs one's books to be on a separate, "dumb" device in order not to be distracted by Angry Avians and Tweets (angry or not), then I'd consider the problem being in the reader rather than the device.
And by the way, if enough people have that problem, there will probably still be some devices made which are only ereaders, not multi-purpose devices.
The question is of course if the market is big enough. Note for example that there has never been a successful "typewriter" type laptop, despite many writers wanting one. And that's probably because the number of people who'd want such a limited device is too small.
(The Alphasmart Neo by the way is very close, you can only write on it, not even format anything, and the keyboard is great, better than on any notebook I've tried. But to my taste, it's hobbled by a too-low-contrast display, like the Kindle was until last year.)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)