Most use either a 6 - inch or 5 - inch screen, there are a few 8 and 9.7 - inch
epaper ereaders out there as well, but Sony is currently the only one that uses the 7 - inch variety.
According to reports, iRiver intends to reveal the iRiver Story HD, the first 6 ″
epaper ereader to use a high definition display with a -LSB-...]
As you would expect with
an epaper ereader, the web browser is very basic.
Not exact matches
I mean we would be willing to put in the work to make a UI / ROM / OS and make one ourselves, it would be a cool challenge, but honesty who even knows about Clearink but the most hardcore of people who read our website, and devour news on
epaper /
ereaders.
«The introduction of
ePaper as a paper replacement, both in its most recognized use as a dedicated
eReader, and now as a dedicated eWriter, is a momentous step forward not only for Improv Electronics but for environmentally - conscious consumers all over the world.»
Thin, lightweight, energy - efficient
eReaders with easy - to - read, paper - like displays have won over consumers, who are snapping up
ePaper devices in unprecedented numbers, causing the market to surge.
The InkCase
eReader features a 3.5 inch, 360 x 600 pixel grayscale
ePaper display which is visible in direct sunlight without a backlight.
I could upgrade to an 8 ″ eInk
ereader with better electronics and higher resolution because I like
epaper so much.
Beside this flexible
ePaper prototype, Sony brought to Eco-Products 2010 one of their better - known solutions, namely an
eReader featuring a flexible OLED panel and an urethane - based chassis, which apparently deliver a reading experience more similar to that of a real book.
TWO), based on technology from MIT's Media Lab, has transformed and defined the
eReader market with its
ePaper technology, enabling a new multi-billion dollar market in less than 10 years.
It has a roomy 10.7 - inch screen and uses the same plastic - based
epaper technology that Plastic Logic's first
ereader was -LSB-...]
It has a roomy 10.7 - inch screen and uses the same plastic - based
epaper technology that Plastic Logic's first
ereader was supposed to use, the Que Pro Reader, that was cancelled before orders ever shipped — the high price and iPad killed it before it was ever released — and then Plastic Logic had to move to Russia to stay afloat.
At CES this week, Vivitek demonstrated both an 8.2 - inch
eReader and a 13 - inch tablet, among the first devices ever to use QR - LPD color
ePaper screens.
Filed Under: News and Updates Tagged With: color e-readers, color
ereaders, e-device, e-paper, edevice,
epaper,
eReader,
ereaders, flexible e-paper
The 5 most likely sources, of the next big advances in
eReaders, probably are — A new
ePaper company, the Amazon vs B&N competition, Google, an
eReader App Store, Regulators.
It's remarkable that 7 months into 2010 the
eReader companies have already hit enough sales to get bulk discounts on
ePaper.
How strange that the company with the magical Mirasol color
ePaper technology is patenting what looks like an amazing design for a folding
eReader.
Shouldn't Qualcomm focus on selling its
ePaper technology to the ten thousand different companies that are jumping into the
eReader space?
While eInk and every other
ePaper technology (except Bridgestone) have been talking about color in 2011 or 2012, Fujitsu released their super-expensive color
eReader in Japan earlier this year.
Only color
epaper other than Fujitsu's that's already available (not in
eReaders though).
The NOOKcolor is more expensive than
epaper - based
ereaders and offers a lower priced, less feature - rich alternative to a full - fledged media tablet.
Even though
ePaper powers popular
ereaders like Amazon's Kindle, you should also not expect the low - power, monochrome displays to end up in an over-sized e-reader.
Both PVI and Qualcomm are claiming that color screen
eReaders are going to arrive by end 2010 with their respective color
ePaper screens — Really?
Back in 2012, E Ink Corporation filed a lawsuit against Trekstor, an ebook reader distributor based in Germany, for selling various
ereaders that used
epaper panels from a Chinese contract company, OED Technologies, that supposedly infringed on E Ink's patents for electronic ink.
Dedicated
ereaders on the other hand — Sony, Nook, Kindle, etc — are handheld devices that use a unique technology called
epaper, which mimics the look of ink on printed paper.
E Ink shows and talks about its latest innovations in consumer electronics, architecture, healthcare, retail and fashion at CES 2018, to bring dynamic elements to generally static environments such as architecture and design, as well as discuss how its
ePaper technology is being integrated into smart cities and connected devices, famous for
eReaders, also revolutionizing the digital signage, healthcare and retail industries as well.
«We're extending our Pandigital Novel
eReader line to include an
ePaper model that will encourage even more readers to embrace the ease, comfort and enjoyment of electronic book readers,» said John Clough, President of Pandigital.
Portable reading devices like the Amazon Kindle, Onyx Boox, PocketBook, and Kobo
eReaders all use a unique technology called
epaper, which aims to mimic the look of ink on printed paper.
The Libre is an LCD - based
ereader that has a 5 - inch
epaper screen that looks like real paper and isn't backlit.
Kobo Inc. is one of the world's fastest - growing
eReading services offering more than 4 million eBooks, magazines and
epapers to their customers all across the globe.
When color
ePaper was first unveiled in 2010, it was widely thought that the major
eReader makers would quickly implement this technology into a series of new color
eReaders.
What makes the new
eReader from Pandigital different from its predecessors is the fact that it packs a 6 - inch
ePaper display that provides a crisp 600x800 resolution, as well as a touch - screen interface made by Sipex / AUO especially for Pandigital.
eInk and Sony collaborated on developing this new
ePaper and recently released the first
eReader in the world using this technology, the 13.3 Sony Digital Paper.
Fujitsu already released their own color
eReader since last year with the FLEPia using their own
epaper technology and the cost is a whopping $ 1000!
Pandigital has outed another two
ereaders, and this time around they've gone back to basics and stuck with
epaper displays.
Note that E-Ink
ePaper displays found on all of the black and white Kindle and Nook
eReaders are not polarized and are readable in direct sunlight with or without polarized sunglasses.