Sony takes Reader openness one step further, will offer EPUB titles only

Slowly but surely, the mega-corp who has historically clung tight to its own formats while the world opts for others is finally seeing the light. Just over a year after Sony pushed out an update that enabled its Reader to use purchased books in the open EPUB format, the outfit is now promising to sell digital books only in that format by the year’s end. Moreover, Sony is aiming to nix its “proprietary anti-copying software in favor of technology from the software maker Adobe that restricts how often e-books can be shared or copied.” Once the switchover takes place, books purchased in Sony’s online store will be readable on any device that supports EPUB, one of which will be Plastic Logic’s forthcoming e-reader. And to think — if only this change of heart would’ve happened prior to the introduction of ATRAC

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Sony takes Reader openness one step further, will offer EPUB titles only originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 07:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Astak’s $199 EZ Reader Pocket PRO wants to give Kindle ‘a run for its money’

Last we heard from Astak, it was quietly peddling some off-the-wall Mentor e-book reader based on a drab OEM model that every other no-name reader manufacturer uses. Now, however, it seems the company has a bit more pep in its step (though it’s still copying others, this time the BeBook), as it has proudly proclaimed that the new 5-inch EZ Reader Pocket PRO is primed to “give Amazon’s Kindle a run for its money.” With Adobe’s blessing, the device is able to support over 20 open file formats along with DRM-laced PDF files; also of note, a sure-to-be-controversial text-to-speech feature can read back documents aloud. The six-ounce device will be available in a half dozen hues, and within you’ll find a 400MHz processor, 512MB of memory, an SD expansion slot, 8-level grayscale E-ink screen, a replaceable battery good for 8,000 page turns per charge and an MP3 player that can operate in the background. Sadly, no wireless connectivity is baked in, but the $199 price point is definitely tantalizing. Anyone looking to get in on a pre-order before it ships later this month?

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Astak’s $199 EZ Reader Pocket PRO wants to give Kindle ‘a run for its money’ originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Aug 2009 05:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung jumps into e-book reader game with the SNE-50K

Samsung’s announced it’s jumping into the best game in town — the paperless book trade — with its SNE-50K e-book reader. With 512MB of onboard storage, a five-inch touchscreen and stylus, and a complete lack of wireless or internet capabilities, it’s not the most advanced reader we’ve ever seen, but it’s slim and light, at nine millimeters thick and weighing about 6.5 ounces. In South Korea, where the reader will be launched first, Samsung has partnered with Kyobo Bookstore, one of the largest booksellers in the country. There’s no word on launches outside of South Korea at this time, but Samsung does plan on showing a prototypes for other countries at a trade show in January (most likely CES).

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Samsung jumps into e-book reader game with the SNE-50K originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Jul 2009 11:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Neoluxiim demos solar-powered e ink display

We’ve been sort of wondering when we’d see a solar e-ink display, and here we are — Neoluxiim is demoing this panel for use in point-of-sale advertising. What’s interesting here is that the background appears to be in color while the text is black, but we’re assuming that’s just a fixed image behind the e-ink layer. Everyone ready for impulse purchasing to go high-tech? Video after the break.

Continue reading Neoluxiim demos solar-powered e ink display

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Neoluxiim demos solar-powered e ink display originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Jul 2009 17:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Bookeen Cybook Opus ebook reader gets handled and adored

The guys and gals at MobileRead have scored hands-on time with the Cybook Opus and early impressions are good. They were smitten with the ergonomics of the device and its “gorgeous” 5-inch e-ink display, but oddly neglected to point out any weaknesses. Equipped with an accelerometer, 1GB of storage, microSD expansion slot, and a user-replaceable battery, the Opus is able to read PDF and ePUB files — with or without DRM — and organize them into folders. There are rumors of a €250 ($349) asking price, but the exact details of when and where it will be available remain unknown. Click through for a video of the reader doing its thing or hit the read links for more extensive coverage.

[Via Slashgear]

Read – MobileRead exclusive : sneak preview of the Bookeen Opus
Read – Cybook Opus: Discovering the reader, video

Continue reading Video: Bookeen Cybook Opus ebook reader gets handled and adored

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Video: Bookeen Cybook Opus ebook reader gets handled and adored originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 12:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bridgestone set to make major push into e-paper business

Bridgestone’s already showed off some fairly impressive e-paper displays, and gone into mass production with displays for inventory tags and whatnot, but it now looks like the company is now set to make its biggest push into the market yet. According to Tech-On, Bridgestone will be announcing details of its plans in July or August, but it appears that the announcement will concern e-paper displays for e-book readers, at least one of which will be A4 in size. That particular screen was making the rounds of exhibitions back in April, and makes use of the company’s proprietary “electron powder and granular material” which, among other things, lets the screen rewrite in just 0.8 seconds. Of course, there’s no word on any actual devices using the e-paper just yet, but we’re hoping that’ll be among the details announced in the next month or so.

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Bridgestone set to make major push into e-paper business originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Jul 2009 17:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Elonex launches £189 6-inch eBook reader through Borders UK

Elonex has been dabbling in small screen wares for quite some time now, so it’s not a huge surprise to finally see it join the likes of BeBook, Sony and Amazon by introducing its very own eBook reader. Design wise, the 6-inch reader looks an awful lot like that played-out OEM model that everyone seems to start with, but hey, you won’t find us kvetching about competition. The device is launching exclusively at Borders UK, and with that comes the new Borders eBook Download Store. With a 4GB expansion card, there’s room for some 8,000 ebooks, and the 9 millimeter-thin frame ensures that this one won’t bog you down too much. Interested consumers over in the UK can snap this one up right now for £189 ($311), and that price nets you 100 free ebooks, a charger, data cable and a great sense of pride.

[Thanks, Sam]

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Elonex launches £189 6-inch eBook reader through Borders UK originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Jul 2009 12:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget’s recession antidote: win a Phosphor E-Ink watch!

This whole global economic crisis, and its resulting massive loss of jobs got us thinking. We here at Engadget didn’t want to stand helplessly by, announcing every new round of misery without giving anything back — so we decided to take the opportunity to spread a little positivity. We’ll be handing out a new gadget every day (except for weekends) to lucky readers until we run out of stuff / companies stop sending things. Today we’ve got a curved E-Ink wristwatch from Phosphor up for grabs. Read the rules below (no skimming — we’re omniscient and can tell when you’ve skimmed) and get commenting! Hooray for free stuff!

Special thanks to Phosphor Watches for providing the gear!

The rules:

  • Leave a comment below. Any comment will do, but if you want to share your proposal for “fixing” the world economy, that’d be sweet too.
  • You may only enter this specific giveaway once. If you enter this giveaway more than once you’ll be automatically disqualified, etc. (Yes, we have robots that thoroughly check to ensure fairness.)
  • If you enter more than once, only activate one comment. This is pretty self explanatory. Just be careful and you’ll be fine.
  • Contest is open to anyone in the 50 States, 18 or older! Sorry, we don’t make this rule (we hate excluding anyone), so be mad at our lawyers and contest laws if you have to be mad.
  • Winner will be chosen randomly. One (1) winner will receive one (1) E-Ink Digital Hour Clock Watch with Black Leather Band. Approximate retail value is $185.
  • If you are chosen, you will be notified by email. Winners must respond within three days of the end of the contest. If you do not respond within that period, another winner will be chosen.
  • Entries can be submitted until Tuesday, June 16h, at 11:59PM ET. Good luck!
  • Full rules can be found here.

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Engadget’s recession antidote: win a Phosphor E-Ink watch! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Jun 2009 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon Kindle DX gets torn apart, examined

Just as soon as we finally get our hands on a new unit to test out, the boys over at Rapir Repair are racing to rip one apart. And that’s just what they’ve done here with the Amazon Kindle DX. Inside it’s got the requisite boards, wires, tape and cat hairs (just kidding), plus an E727NV WN2 wireless card, memory, CPU and Epson E-ink panel controller. It’s actually pretty sparse and clean inside of there — we’d expect nothing less! Hit the read link for the full, glorious disassembling (though there is one more shot after the break).

Continue reading Amazon Kindle DX gets torn apart, examined

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Amazon Kindle DX gets torn apart, examined originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Jun 2009 19:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why E-Books Are Stuck in a Black-and-White World

e-ink-color-reader

Electronic book readers may be the future of publishing, but in one important respect, they’re still stuck in 1950: Almost every e-book reader on the market has a black-and-white display. Most can’t display more than a handful of different shades of gray.

That’s why display makers are racing to bring color to the world of e-books. Their goal is to make Gray’s Anatomy and its more than 1,200 full-color illustrations as interesting as the next Dan Brown novel.

The hitch is that color e-ink technologies aren’t anywhere near ready for prime time. Amazon chief Jeff Bezos recently told shareholders that a Kindle with a color screen is “multiple years” away.

“There’s no doubt color displays can offer much more compared to black and white, which is why we are working on it,” says Sri Peruvemba, vice president of marketing for E Ink. “And so far we have hit all the milestones that we had set for ourselves.” Last week E Ink was acquired by Taiwanese company Prime View International for $215 million.

E-book readers have become the hottest consumer products of the year. Since the first e-reader was introduced by Sony in 2006, and particularly since the introduction of Amazon.com’s popular Kindle in 2008, demand for e-readers has taken off. More than 1 million black-and-white displays have been sold so far, says E Ink, whose black-and-white displays power most of the e-readers on the market. And there are more than 15 e-reader models currently available or in the works.

With the exception of the Flepia, though, almost all e-readers are monochromatic. So what’s the technological holdup? To understand that, you first have to understand how E Ink’s black-and-white displays work. Electronic ink, pioneered by the company, is composed of millions of microcapsules. Each microcapsule has positively charged white particles and negatively charged black particles suspended in a clear fluid. When a positive electric field is applied, the black particles are attracted to the top and become visible to the user. That makes that area appear black. The reverse is also true: A negative electric field draws white particles to the top, making the area appear lighter. For an electronic display, the ink is printed on a sheet of plastic film, and a layer of circuitry is laminated to it to drive the ink.

For a color display, E Ink needs to put a color filter on top of its black-and-white display. A color filter usually has four sub-pixels — red, green, blue and white — that are combined to create each full-color pixel. That also means reduced brightness of display.

“With four sub-pixels, we get only a fourth of the area that we use today in the black-and-white displays. That means the resolution of the black and white display needs to get higher for the color filter to be effective,” says Peruvemba. A 6-inch E Ink black-and-white display has a SVGA resolution of 800 x 600 pixels. To put a color filter on top would require the underlying display to have almost double the existing resolution.

The color filters also block a large amount of light, making the displays look dull and washed out, says Young. “The challenge is to balance the color output of the filter with the amount of light blocked by it,” he says. The good news? When E Ink figures it out, its black-and-white displays will be better than ever, says Young.

E Ink says it is on track for large scale production of color displays at the end of next year. At the recent DisplayWeek conference in San Antonio, Texas, E Ink showed off prototypes of its color screen. Meanwhile, E Ink rival Kent Displays has already seen its color screen included in the Fujistu’s Flepia, the only color e-reader available today. The Flepia is for sale in Japan only.

Other contenders in the race for color e-reader displays include Pixel Qi, the startup founded by former One Laptop Per Child project CTO Mary Lou Jepsen, and Qualcomm. Qualcomm could improve its existing line of low power displays called Mirasol and introduce a color version next year.

There’s a caveat. E-readers with color displays can’t match up to the standards set by LCD and now OLED displays. “Color displays for e-readers doesn’t have anywhere the contrast ratio of LCDs or OLED,” says Barry Young, managing director of the OLED association. “For color electrophoretic displays, the contrast is down to about 20 to 1, while for LCDs it is in the 1,000s to 1 and for OLEDs is 10,000s to 1 range.”

“People don’t like color screens that are dark,” says Raj Apte, manager of prototype devices and circuits for PARC, formerly known as Xerox PARC, “and so far, the displays for e-readers we have seen lack the brightness that makes color screens attractive.”

E Ink’s rivals are facing their own challenges. Kent’s color screens are based on cholesteric LCDs (liquid cyrstals where the molecules are arranged with their axes parallel to each other in one layer and then are displaced a little for each following layer to give them a helix-like structure.) The advantage with cholesteric LCDs is that they consume much lower power than traditional LCDS and are bistable — which means they can retain their image even when the power is lost. These LCDs stack red, green and blue films to create a color display. The trade-off for them is the refresh rate, says Young.

“It operates in three stages, so we are looking at a refresh rate of probably a second for a page compared to say a Kindle 2’s 250 milliseconds,” he says.

The stacking process also raises questions of whether Kent’s displays can be thinner than its competitors. “Thickness is just an engineering issue that can be solved with the use of the right substrate,” says Asad Hussain, vice president of technology for Kent Displays.

A problem that won’t go away as easily will be in convincing e-reader makers to choose Kent Displays over rival E Ink, which has proven its mettle. A 16-year-old private company, Kent has been showing demos of its color screens for years. But so far, other than Fujitsu, it hasn’t found any takers, at least none announced publicly.

Hussain blames the reluctance of e-reader manufacturers to introduce color displays. “Right now black-and-white displays have momentum and though everyone wants color, no one is willing to make the shift.”

Check out our detailed comparison of how the four color e-reader display technologies

colore-ereaders-table

See also:

Photo: E Ink color screen prototype/E Ink