Pandigital takes a second shot at digital reading with the Novel Personal eReader

Second time’s got to be the charm, eh Pandigital? No, we weren’t exactly the biggest fans of the company’s Android-running, LCD e-reader, but its new e-ink based Novel Personal eReader definitely follows a simpler approach. Aimed at those that wish to read in any and all environments (see Amazon’s latest commercial for that real life example), the 9.1-ounce device has a 6-inch Sipex/AUO ePaper touch display, integrated WiFi, access to Barnes & Noble’s eBookstore, an accelerometer and 2GB of onboard storage / a built-in card reader that accepts up to 32GB cards. Not too shabby in terms of raw specs, that’s for sure, but its functionality better be damn impressive for its $200 MSRP — considering, you know, that Barnes & Noble’s own WiFi-equipped Nook starts at $149 these days. Of course, we fully expect that price to drop once it hits those familiar big-box retailers, but until you see it in that colorful weekend circular we leave you with the full press release and press shots below to look over.

Continue reading Pandigital takes a second shot at digital reading with the Novel Personal eReader

Pandigital takes a second shot at digital reading with the Novel Personal eReader originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Oct 2010 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Reader Pocket Edition (PRS-350SC) review

There’s no question about it: Sony had its work cut out when it came time to improve the next generation of its e-readers. Amazon’s Kindle isn’t only the best selling electronic reading device out there, but its new $139 WiFi version is the fastest-selling yet. And then there’s the Barnes & Noble’s Nook, which is an equally capable competitor, especially with recent firmware updates. Oh, and don’t forget about the $140 Kobo. Yep, Sony had some serious work to do and its cheapest option – the $179.99 Pocket Edition — does differentiate in some striking ways. The aluminum reader has been upgraded with a new 5-inch E Ink Pearl display and now has an extremely responsive touchscreen for navigating through books / menus. The updates certainly have put Sony back into the final four, but there’s a few lacking features that just keep it from going all the way. You’ll want to hit the break to find out just what we’re talking about in our full review of this little guy.

Continue reading Sony Reader Pocket Edition (PRS-350SC) review

Sony Reader Pocket Edition (PRS-350SC) review originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 17:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Phosphor’s latest watch can E Ink its way through 24 time zones

Tired of waiting for Seiko to produce an E Ink watch that mere mortals can touch, much less afford? A little company by the name of Art Technology has been delivering mass-market wearables using the technology since 2007 — and its latest model dials up the functionality factor just a smidge by adding support for twenty-four time zones, two of which can be displayed simultaneously. Granted, it’s using a segmented display, not dot matrix — which means it bears a closer resemblance to that Timex you owned in the late ’80s than Seiko’s wild active matrix model — but again, like we said, this one’s actually quite affordable and it’s available right this second. Depending on your choice of band style, you’ll pay anywhere from $150 to $195; follow the break for the full press release.

Continue reading Phosphor’s latest watch can E Ink its way through 24 time zones

Phosphor’s latest watch can E Ink its way through 24 time zones originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 10:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Screen-Research Breakthroughs Promise Low Power, Fast Response

Improvements in fundamental screen technologies by separate teams at Vanderbilt and Cincinnati point towards the low-power, quick-response displays of the future.

If this research bears fruit, it could improve the next generation of LCD displays for computers, televisions, e-readers and commercial interfaces.

For the University of Cincinnati team, the key challenge for power consumption in screens is how to reduce the energy used to illuminate the display so you can see it. They sidestepped the problem of traditional designs by using a highly reflective surface in the screen’s substrata that reflects ambient light rather than generating its own.

“What we’ve developed breaks down a significant barrier to bright electronic displays that don’t require a heavy battery to power them,” lead researcher Jason Heikenfeld said. He believes his team’s new display can generate brighter, high-color-saturated devices equal to that of a conventional LCD screen with an energy cost comparable to the E Ink displays on devices like Amazon’s Kindle.

“Conventional wisdom says you can’t have it all with electronic devices: speed, brightness and low-cost manufacturing,” Heikenfeld said. “That’s going to change with the introduction of this new discovery into the market.”

It’s not the first time people have made use of reflective layers to illuminate LCD screens. Startup Pixel Qi offers a multimode display which, in its low-power state, uses reflected light instead of battery-draining LED or fluorescent illumination, as most LCDs do.

And Qualcomm’s new Mirasol screen technology also offers full-color and video at low power, but Heikenfeld claims his team’s new display technology is at least three times brighter than Qualcomm’s.

The Vanderbilt University team’s claims are relatively more modest, but perhaps more easily incorporated into existing screen technology. The chemical lab led by Piotr Kaszynski thinks one path to a low-energy, quick-response display future is to change the chemical composition of our LCD screens.

Zwitterionic liquid crystals./Kaszynski lab

“We have created liquid crystals with an unprecedented electric dipole, more than twice that of existing liquid crystals,” says Kaszynski. This means the dipoles will require a lower threshold voltage (using less power) and switch between light and dark states much faster, allowing for a quicker refresh rate.

The new liquid crystals have a “zwitterionic” structure: Their inorganic portions are negatively charged and organic portions are positively charged, but they carry a net electrical charge of zero. Zwitterions have long been thought a key to producing more-efficient liquid crystals, but the chemical procedure to produce them in the proper structure was only discovered in 2002.

Top image: Jason Heikenfeld, Angela Klocke/University of Cincinnati

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Why Borders’ Kobo E-Reader Still Falls Short

The knock on Borders’ E Ink reader at launch was that unlike the Kindle, Nook, or Sony entries, it had no wireless access. The new Kobo Wireless adds that to the mix, along with three color options, as Gadget Lab’s Charlie Sorrel reported this morning.

The new Kobo also keeps its pricing low: $139, identical to the Wi-Fi-only Kindle, $10 less than the Wi-Fi Nook. Kobo’s e-books are also priced competitively compared to the Nook and Kindle stores. Finally, the Kobo costs $40 less than the similarly multi-colored Sony’s Pocket Edition. Like the first Kobo, the Sony has no network capability — but importantly, it does have an optical touchscreen.

Ultimately, the big problem I foresee with the new Kobo isn’t the network gap but the interface gap, particularly as it adds the ability to browse and buy books online. One reason the first Kobo didn’t have an on-board bookstore was that adding that functionality to the device typically commits the manufacturer to including some key hardware. But check out a picture of the Kobo from the front and tell me what you don’t see:

That’s right — still no keyboard, just a big five-way controller button.

Now, the Kobo’s store and library navigation look very nice, and I’m sure many people will appreciate the added ability to wirelessly browse best-sellers and genre categories. But the key advantages of shopping in a digital bookstore for most of us are:

1) a gigantic selection, bigger than any physical bookstore;
2) the ability to search for and quickly find EXACTLY the book you want to buy.

Text entry on the Kindle and Nook are not fantastic, but they work. And you can search for and buy e-books on the web site or using the desktop application, but that negates most of the benefits of being able to buy over Wi-Fi. Without 3G, you can’t buy books anywhere; without a built-in web browser, I don’t really see much other use for Wi-Fi connectivity.

Those are the trade-offs that Borders has chosen for Kobo — and the tradeoffs you’d have to weigh as a Kobo Wireless owner. Me, if I had my heart set on hot pink, I’d spend the extra scratch and get the Sony. If I’m giving up on network access and text entry to browse virtual bookshelves, I at least want to be able to flick through them with my fingertips rather than using a Nintendo controller.

Update: Kobo CEO Mike Serbinis chimed in in the comments to this post to note that on the company’s new readers, “there is a virtual keyboard to search for authors, titles, etc. It’s easy to use, and keeps the industrial design clean & simple and focused on reading vs typing, or accidentally hitting a button which does happen often on other devices.”

All images via Borders.com.

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Startup Plans Pocketable Dual-Screen E-Reader

Just seven months after unveiling the Entourage eDGe, a device that somewhat awkwardly combined an e-reader and a LCD screen, Entourage is gearing up to launch a pocket-sized version.

The original dual-screen eDGe has a 9.7-inch E Ink screen on the left half and a 10-inch touchscreen LCD on the right. That means you could use it as an e-reader, a notepad or as a netbook–or all at the same time. In practice, it wasn’t all it was cracked up to be.

The Pocket Edge will have folding, book-like body with a six-inch black-and-white E Ink screen on one side and a seven-inch color LCD touchscreen. It will still run the Android operating system, says The Digital Reader.

Entourage is planning a 3G edition of the Pocket Edge for Verizon and a separate, Wi-Fi-only model.

The original Entourage eDGe made its debut at the Consumer Electronics Show in January. Then, e-readers and netbooks were two of the hottest consumer electronics products. Entourage tried to combine the two and birth the eDGe. But the Frankensteinish device suffered from some major problems.

For starters, the eDGe was just too big and heavy. The 10-inch screen size meant that it couldn’t easily be whipped out and used to read e-books on the train or browse web pages on the road. The device’s weight, about twice that of the iPad, put a strain on the arms if it was held up for more than 15 minutes.

The eDGe ended up as a device too big to be an e-reader and, without a keyboard, too uncomfortable to be just a netbook.

The Pocket Edge hopes to correct some of those problems. In terms of tech specs, it will have features similar to the bigger version. It will come with a USB port, a micro SD card slot, a  camera and a non-removable battery.

Along with the smaller screen, the changes mean that the Pocket Edge will be lighter, about one pound, compared to the three pounds of the original.

What’s disappointing to hear though is that the Pocket Edge will use the older Vizplex version of the E Ink screen and not the new Pearl E Ink display that’s in the latest Kindle and Sony e-readers. The Pearl has a much better contrast and for e-reader enthusiasts the older technology in the Pocket Edge is likely to be a disappointment.

It’s also indicative of why the eDGe didn’t become a hit the first time around. If the device is mediocre e-reader and a passable netbook, consumers have little incentive to buy a half-baked device that’s doesn’t offer the best of either worlds. Instead, they are better off getting a Kindle or a Nook that does one thing very well and using a netbook or a tablet for their other computing needs.

Entourage hasn’t said how much the Pocket Edge will cost but the device is expected to ship in late October. So far, the word is it will be cheaper than the $500 original model.

Check out more photos of the new Pocket Edge below.

The Pocket Edge Combines an E Ink and LCD Screen.

The Pocket Edge has a USB port and a micro SD card slot.

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Photos: Nate Hoffelder/The Digital Reader


How would you change Pixel Qi’s 3Qi display?

Yeah, Pixel Qi’s 3Qi display is a wee bit more niche than your average superphone, but we just know a handful of you DIYers out there took the plunge on this one. Mary Lou Jepsen’s pride and joy went on sale back in July, offering crafty modders the chance to swap their lackluster netbook panel for an E Ink slayer. We were personally thrilled with the results, but we still saw a few things that could’ve been ironed out given the time, money and technical insight. If you’ve also taken the leap, we’re oh-so-curious to know how you would redesign the dual-mode 3Qi. Make it sharper? A higher resolution? A different size? Something else entirely? No walls allowed here — get creative down in comments below.

How would you change Pixel Qi’s 3Qi display? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Sep 2010 22:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Amazon Ad Shows Kindle As Sexy Competitor

Amazon’s new commercial puts the Kindle in the best possible light: poolside, in the hands of a beautiful, bikini-clad woman. It even works in a dig at the iPad and other LCD tablets; the dweeby guy next to the Kindle reader can only see his own ugly reflection.

This video has been percolating around the tech blogosphere for a couple of days, but I don’t think anyone has gotten it quite right. (I was off yesterday. Sorry.) I honestly don’t think it’s about competing with the iPad, or touting the benefits of non-reflective screens, as much as it’s about re-positioning the Kindle in the popular imagination.

Think back three years to when the Kindle was first announced. Yes, there was a splashy cover story about the future of reading. But everyone agreed: the device itself was ugly, it was expensive, and its market was limited to rich bookwormy dorks who needed something to read on airplanes. There, the physical world could vanish, leaving behind the virtual mindspace of a not-quite-real book.

Now, the Kindle is stylish; it’s relatively inexpensive; and the world in which you read from it doesn’t look like a place you’d want to escape from at all. That is, apart from your nosy neighbors and their self-involved not-quite-pickup lines.

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Sony Pocket E-Reader Combines Touchscreen, E Ink

Sony 350 with Cover from Sony Style

Sony doesn’t get as much attention for its e-book readers as Amazon, Apple or Barnes & Noble, but it remains a serious competitor. Its newest and prettiest model will be available stateside this week, and is definitely worth a closer look.

Sony will release three new e-reader models this fall: the Pocket, Touch and Daily Edition, all featuring E Ink displays with optical touchscreens. According to Sony Style USA, the silver Pocket Reader is available for order now and will ship tomorrow (Sept. 14); the pink version can be preordered and should ship Thursday (Sept. 16).

When Gadget Lab looked at Sony’s models earlier this month, they discussed their strategy in the market. “The bottom line is we didn’t want to compete on price,” said Steve Haber, president of Sony’s digital reading business division. “We wanted to build quality and overall experience. We want to give consumers the feel of buying an e-reader, not a toy.”

The most attention-grabbing feature of the new Sony is the fact that its E Ink screen responds to touch input. The touch sensors aren’t actually in the screen, but are triggered by infrared sensors all around the screen’s edges. Invisible beams respond when your finger breaks the plane of the screen — just like security devices in a spy movie. You don’t even have to actually physically touch the screen for the sensors to respond, just get within the sensor’s threshold.

The Sony PRS-350 has the same Pearl high-contrast E Ink screen as the Kindle, but in a slightly smaller form factor (5 inches instead of 6 inches). According to iReader Review (and as you can see from the gallery after the jump below), this knocks the image and text quality of the old Sony Readers out of the park. And because the new Pocket Reader doesn’t have a hardware keyboard, the whole device is only 5 3/4 inches by 4 1/8 inches, and just a shade over 1/3-inch thick.

Like all Sony Readers, it supports both ePub and PDF with or without DRM. The body design is gorgeous, and the build quality is reportedly top-notch.

So we have a tiny, touchscreen E Ink reading machine that might even display images and tiny fonts better than the new Kindle. Did Sony just make the long-awaited “paperback e-reader” to move the whole show?

No, unfortunately, they didn’t. Here’s why.

The Sony Pocket reader has no internet capability at all. No Wi-Fi, no 3G. Nothing.

This means that while it’s terrific for reading books, you can’t use it to read anything else. No checking e-mail, no using Instapaper, no Google Reader.

Speaking of Instapaper and RSS readers — there’s also the specter of the Amazon App Store, which promises to add a lot more functionality to the Kindle. Functionality that’s likely to be dependent in no small part on web access. Even if Sony starts thinking seriously about casual gaming on their e-Readers — and frankly, I think moving in the other direction and putting e-Books on PSPs is a lot more likely — they’re still moving uphill.

In a follow-up review, iReader Review notes that actually loading books onto the Pocket Reader is a giant pain. “It’s not just that you can’t get books to Sony 350 wirelessly in 60 seconds. You can’t get books to it in 60 seconds period…. Sony proves that it’s a hardware company and not a software company.” He notes several other user-experience problems with the device, too, including an imagined vignette where Sony asks its software design team to take this magical device and completely screw up the UI.

Finally, it costs $179. That’s $10 less than the 3G Kindle (which gets you free 3G forever), and $40 more than the Wi-Fi-only Kindle ($30 more than the Wi-Fi Nook), both of which still get you Wi-Fi. A 20-25 percent markup is a lot to pay for a touchscreen.

Face it — two months ago, the Sony Pocket Reader would have been a cannonball in the world of e-readers. It would have been cheaper and more capable than nearly anything on the market. But the Kindle 3, with its improved screen and WebKit browser, is actually turning into something more than a repository for e-books.

Sony’s made a gorgeous one, and I think it will appeal to many, many people. Seriously — it’s appealing to me. But it doesn’t look like the future.

P.S. Whatever you do, don’t try to find this e-reader by searching for “Sony 350.” Sony makes a kajillion products from cameras to DVD players that all have “350″ somewhere in their official handle. It’s a nightmare. Why they don’t just call the thing “Pocket Reader” is completely beyond me.

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kindle3vssony350bookcovers


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All images courtesy of iReader Review.

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Seikos E Ink Watch for the Masses

seikoeink.jpg
No stranger to E Ink wristwatches, Seiko finally brings its “active matrix” watch out of concept and onto retail shelves. Unlike previous E Ink watches that can be viewed when looking down on the dial, this watch offers a full 180-degree viewing angle.

Despite its retro look, the “Future Now” EPD watch packs plenty of future tech inside. It utilizes E Ink on an electrophoretic display. Boasting 80,000 pixels, each pixel can display four shades of grey. Solar cells frame the display.

The watch is controlled by radio movement and gets local time from the nearest atomic clock.

While exact pricing is still unknown, it’s expected to be affordable, and not sky-high luxury prices like Seiko’s previous E Ink watches. Seiko says these watches will be on retail shelves by the end of the year.