Boyue (previously known as Boeye) makes E Ink readers, here showing their latest
Rockchip based E Ink Android e-readers, also showing off a non-functioning mockup of their 10.3» Mobius flexible E Ink ultra light reader that might come next year if E Ink starts the mass production of the 10.3» Mobius display by that time.
The processor gets upgraded from a 600 MHz chip (RK2808) to a 800 MHz chip (RK2818), still
Rockchip based and is capable of running at 1 GHz, but is clocked down for better battery life, less heat.
Not exact matches
This ensures enhanced response times while a 1 GHz
Rockchip RK2818 ARM -
based processor ensures blazing performance.
So it's now a 720 MHz CPU made by Telechips
based on the ARM11 core that now does duty in the 7 inch MID, replacing the earlier ARM9 -
based 600 MHz
Rockchip RK2808.
The tablet is
based on a 600 MHz
Rockchip RK2818 processor which is a step up from the
Rockchip RK2808 that had impressed many with its performance some time ago.
Also check - out my video of the
Rockchip RK2918
based laptop which could also provide great value for an ARM Powered laptop running Chrome OS or Honeycomb.
Quality Industrial has a $ 80
Rockchip Rk2818 resistive (+ $ 15 for capacitive) and they are also showing a 1024x600 7» capacitive 3G - enabled NEC / Renesas ARM Cortex - A9 533Mhz Dual - Core
based tablet for about $ 200 a piece.
Boeye shows a Pearl E-ink
based e-reader using the
Rockchip RK2818 processor and a software optimization for fast page turns.
It features a 9.7 - inch 20148 x 1536 touchscreen, an ARM -
based Rockchip processor optimized for Chrome OS, 4 GB of RAM and 32 GB of storage, with microSD card support if students need additional space.
You can quibble over camera quality and app performance, but the reality is that as long as they're running a recent version of Android, with a turnkey set of Qualcomm or MediaTek (or perhaps Samsung or
Rockchip or any number of companies producing SoCs
based on ARM's architecture) chips, they'll be fine.
XDA also dug through the other readable files and found references to the
Rockchip rk3399, the ARM -
based chip that's powering the Samsung Chromebook Plus.