LG Display showcases 11.5-inch flexible e-paper

We’re still years away from commercialized color variants, but LG Display is proving that bigger ain’t really a thang. In fact, it recently showcased an 11.5-inch sheet of flexible e-paper at SID 2009, which could obviously be used in the Kindle XXL. Sadly, few (and by few, we mean none) details were given regarding an eventual launch date, but hey, at least it’s around, right?

[Via OLED-Display]

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LG Display showcases 11.5-inch flexible e-paper originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 23:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IAC Prodigy e-reader does EV-DO, HSPA, WiMAX and WiFi

While you might say Amazon’s Kindle is lucky to have a single CDMA / EV-DO radio built-in, IAC would likely venture to disagree. Over at Computex, said firm was showcasing its Prodigy e-reader, which just so happens to pack every major wireless radio we can think of. EV-DO Rev. A? Check. WCDMA / HSPA? Check. WiMAX? Oh, definitely. 802.11b/g WiFi? For sure, dudes. And the fun doesn’t stop there — it’s packing a 6-inch 800 x 600 e-paper touchscreen, 256MB of NAND Flash memory, 128MB of DDR memory, 2GB of NAND storage and a Marvell PXA310 processor. If all goes well, this little bugger will ship in Q4 over in Taiwan, but it’ll be a cold day in Hades before it arrives on US soil. Video’s after the break.

Continue reading IAC Prodigy e-reader does EV-DO, HSPA, WiMAX and WiFi

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IAC Prodigy e-reader does EV-DO, HSPA, WiMAX and WiFi originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 20:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iRex to release color e-reader in 2011?

Remember when iRex single-handedly revolutionized the e-reader industry last fall? Remember “Seeing Is Believing?” We didn’t either, until the company reminded us of its continued existence with the announcement that it’s developing a new color e-book reader that uses subtractive color mixing to display text and images three times the brightness of existing displays. While this won’t be the first color e-ink tech we’ve laid our eyes on, the promise of print-quality color e-books is certainly tantalizing. Your move, Sony.

[Via SlashGear]

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iRex to release color e-reader in 2011? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 14:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Pixel Qi’s e-ink / LCD hybrid screen demoed at Computex

Wow, just wow. We were about three months away from putting Pixel Qi on a temporary vaporware watch, and now we couldn’t be happier about shoving this crow down our throats. The outfit’s so-called 3qi display technology — which seamlessly integrates e-ink with LCD — was on display this week at Computex, and there’s a beautiful video just after the break that shows it off. Put simply, we’ve never seen a laptop display look as good in broad daylight as Pixel Qi’s display, and even though there’s no striking colors in the black-and-white e-ink mode, at least you can see the thing (clearly, at that) without squinting. Seriously, hop on past the break and mash play.

Continue reading Video: Pixel Qi’s e-ink / LCD hybrid screen demoed at Computex

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Video: Pixel Qi’s e-ink / LCD hybrid screen demoed at Computex originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 12:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Next Up for E-book Readers: Social Networking, Online Sharing

txtr_reader_white

Digital book clubs could become the next big thing. Over the next few months, electronic book readers are likely to add the ability to access Facebook and Twitter, share book recommendations and rate e-books, says Forrester Research analyst Sarah Rotman Epps in her latest report. And at least one company is already moving towards the idea.

“Buying and reading books is an inherently social process and the lack of robust sharing capabilities on the (Amazon) Kindle is an obvious weakness that competitors will address,” says Epps.

Txtr, a Germany-based e-book reader startup, is doing just that. Txtr hopes to introduce a new device at the Frankfurt Book Fair in October that will put social networking and sharing at its center.

“Txtr is to focused on the idea of connected reading,” Andreas Steinhauser, founder and CEO of Txtr told Wired.com. “You can create collections of web pages, documents or images and give friends access to it.”

E-book readers have turned into one of the hottest consumer devices of the year. So far more than a million E Ink  displays, which powers most e-book readers, have been sold worldwide. (E-paper manufacturer Prime View Technologies announced Monday that it would be acquiring E Ink, potentially increasing the latter’s capacity to deal with large production volumes.) Companies such as Amazon, Fujitsu, Sony and Samsung are vying to grab a slice of the e-books reader market.  And as the competition heats up, e-book reader makers will have to innovate.

E-Readers will need to sport applications that connect people through recommendations and ratings, says Epps. And that means integration with communities like Facebook and Goodreads. E-readers are also likely to evolve to provide a way to recommend and buy content for others, says Epps.

“We anticipate that some households will have multiple eReaders and the devices will have to support
content sharing within a household to a greater extent than the Kindle’s Content Manager currently does,” she says

Txtr’s Steinhauser agrees that for new e-readers social features will be important as they seek to differentiate themselves from their peers. “We think it is necessary to allows users to sync their device with friends over Wi-fi or Bluetooth,” he says.

Separately, Amazon announced Monday that it will start shipping the Kindle DX, a 9.7-inch  screen size e-book reader, on June 10 for $489.

See also:
Why E-Books Look so Ugly
How to Choose an E-book Reader
Hands On: New Cool-er E-book Reader Turns up the Heat

Photo: Txtr


PVI to buy E Ink for $215 million

You may not know who Taiwan-based Prime View International is but the makers of the Amazon Kindle and Sony Reader sure do. See, PVI is the company that builds the electronic paper displays for the world’s most popular ebook readers. Now, it’s also the expectant owner of US-based E Ink and all the associated patents that come with. The deal, if approved by government regulators, is expected to close by October.

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PVI to buy E Ink for $215 million originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Jun 2009 04:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pixel Qi demonstrates 3qi display, merges e-ink with LCD

Pixel Qi demonstrates three-mode display set to merge e-ink with LCD

We knew Pixel Qi was up to something when it pledged to give us a cheap laptop that could last 40 hours on a charge. Now we can finally see what, with the OLPC spin-off releasing some images of a prototype screen called 3qi that looks like it can combine the best of e-ink and traditional LCD displays — prototypes that will be shown in the flesh at Computex next week. The screen can work as a traditional backlit LCD when indoors, can have that backlight disabled to be perfectly visible outdoors (shown after the break), and, as its pièce de résistance, can be toggled into an energy-efficient “epaper” mode. How exactly the company is fitting these seemingly disparate slices of technology into a single 10.1-inch screen is something of a mystery, but we’re guessing much will be answered next week ahead of a planned product launch by the end of the year. Color us intrigued.

[Via PC World]

Continue reading Pixel Qi demonstrates 3qi display, merges e-ink with LCD

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Pixel Qi demonstrates 3qi display, merges e-ink with LCD originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 May 2009 08:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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A color Kindle is years away, buyers remorse here to stay

A color Kindle is years away, buyers remorse here to stay

Hey, Kindle 2 owners, remember when Amazon made the device official and you thought: “Well, it took them a year and a half to replace the old one, so I can buy this one without fears of immediate obsolescence.” And then remember how three months later they announced the Kindle DX and you thought: “Oh.” Well, if you’re now fearing a color Kindle will come sauntering along in a few months to make everyone jealous, fear not, as Jeff Bezos is saying the tech is still “multiple years” away, adding “I’ve seen the color displays in the laboratory and I can assure you they’re not ready for prime time.” From the few prototypes we’ve seen we’d tend to agree. So, anyone still on the fence about a Kindle, go ahead and buy now with confidence, as your devices won’t be made to look quaint any time soon — at least until that pizza box-sized reader Amazon’s been working on in secret is announced in July. Did we mention it actually cooks pizza?

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A color Kindle is years away, buyers remorse here to stay originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 May 2009 07:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pixel Qi Offers Peek at New Display

pixelqi-0528Pixel Qi, a company that promises inexpensive, low-power displays that could potentially rival E Ink screens, has been talking about its product for months.

But Thursday Pixel Qi founder Mary Lou Jepsen posted the first pics of the display on her blog. The pictures are a little fuzzy but they show the display in two modes and also running on a netbook.

We wrote about Pixel Qi earlier this month and talked to Jepsen. Pixel Qi’s displays called 3Qi will operate in three settings: a full-color, bright, conventional LCD mode; a very low-power, sunlight-readable, reflective e-paper mode; and a low-power, basic color transflective mode. The screens are initially expected to be available in 10.5-inch and 7.5-inch screen sizes.

If successful, the 3Qi displays could effectively bridge the high-speed, full-color benefits of traditional LCDs and the low-power, reader-friendly qualities of electronic ink displays.

In one photograph on her blog, Jepsen shows two 3Qi screens side-by-side, one in full color mode with its backlight on and the other in a black-and-white electronic paper mode with its backlight off.

The screens will be available this fall in netbooks and e-book readers, says Jepsen. Netbooks might be an easier market for Pixel Qi to enter. The Cambridge, Massachusets-based E Ink has a near monopoly on the e-books reader market. Earlier this week, E Ink announced that more than 1 million e-book readers use its display.

Photo: Pixel Qi’s Screen/Mary Lou Jepsen


Cool-er eBook Reader Review

The Gadget: The Cool-er, a lower (compared to the Kindle) priced eBook reader that lacks built-in wireless functionality and a hardware keyboard, but adds music, an SD card slot and PDF/MP3 support. But of course, the lower price is the big draw.

The Price: $250

The Verdict: Cheap in every sense of the word, but usable. The Cool-er has the same 6-inch screen as the Kindle 2, but renders text with a proprietary computer-screen-esque font face instead of the more “print”-like Kindle 2 typeface. It is, of course, size-adjustable. You can also flip it 90 degrees to read in landscape mode.

As if it wasn’t obvious enough from its appearance, the Cool-er is designed to be the iPod of eBook readers. It succeeds in looking like an iPod and being available in a lot of colors, but fails in usability and design. The only thing going for it is that it works as an eBook reader if reading is the most important part of the package (which it is, to many people). Also, it’s quite a bit lighter than the Kindle 2, so you can easily hold it with one hand while you’re brushing your teeth, lying in bed, or using the bathroom.

The problem comes from the interface—it feels very much like a Chinese knockoff. The giant iPod design, with the D-Pad scrollwheel acting as both a menu selector and a page turner, isn’t the best way to read a book. Meaning, you can only turn pages with either your right or left hand (if it’s in landscape mode), making reading slightly more awkward. The onscreen UI is also indicative of it being made by a smaller company; it works, but you have to conform to the interface rather than the other way around.

Being able to play audiobooks in MP3 format off the SD card is better than straining to understand text-to-speech with the Kindle 2’s robotic voice. And listening to music while reading is good, but you have no playback controls unless you get out of your book and into the file. It’s really mostly intended for audiobooks, I believe. And it’s more half-baked than anything.

You load eBooks onto the player via mini USB or onto the SD card, but it’s not quite compatible with Macs. Transferring files via OS X will get you four blank folders (the metadata files that Macs deposit on external drives) that you can’t seem to ever get rid of. Also, the battery meter is somewhat finicky and fluctuates up or down depending on its mood. There’s also no great auto-sleep mode like the Kindle has.

Where They Get You: The books. The Host, by tween vampire novelist Stephenie Meyer, costs $20.79 on coolerbooks.com, but only $9.99 for Amazon’s Kindle. Other, older and less popular novels, are more on par between the two stores. You do get 25% off of the list price if you own a Cool-er reader.

The coolerbooks selection is also smaller than Amazon’s, housing none of Ian Fleming’s Bond books, one of which I’ve found used in the photos anyway. (Amazon has them all for $9.99 each.)

Good For Piracy: But the upside is that the Cool-er supports native PDF format documents, like the Kindle DX, so you can load on downloaded and torrented eBooks with ease. But if you really wanted to pirate books onto the Kindle 2, it’s just a matter of using calibre to transcode the books into a compatible format beforehand, so it’s not that huge of a benefit.

Versus Other Players: It’s not as capable as say, a Kindle 2 or the touch-capable Sony PRS-700 reader, and it’s not as cheap as this lousy Ectaco jetBook reader at $170, so it’s kinda just right there in the middle.

If it were $199, we’d recommend this to people who just want to read, and don’t care about all that extra stuff like touchscreen or downloading books directly to the device before your plane takes off. But it’s $250, which is only $50 cheaper than the Sony. If that $50 is very important to you, go with the Cool-er, otherwise we’d recommend either the Sony or the Kindle 2.

I really, really wish this reader were $199, because it’s not a bad reader, it’s just not as good as what’s out there now. [Cooler]

$50 to $100 cheaper than more popular eBook readers

UI is only so-so, and page controls are slightly awkward

Feels plasticky, lighter build means easier reading

Not as polished as Kindle 2 or Sony’s PRS-700, which may be worth the extra $50 to $100