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Cell Phone as e-Book Reader (in Japan)

aussie_a writes "Reading books on your cell phone has become the latest feature in Japan. With games, e-mails and the news already standard features, the Japanese cell-phone is more then just a phone. Novels are downloaded in segments and are run as Java-based applications on the phone. But users can do much more then just read the book, they are able to search for books, write reviews and send fan mail to the authors."

24 of 136 comments (clear)

  1. Good For Scrolls by pressesc · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is how the story lead would appear on a cell phone. Is it good for anything but Haiku?

    1. Re:Good For Scrolls by kagelump · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Has it occrred to
      anyone that
      japanese characters
      are ideograms and
      takes up about
      two english
      letters on a
      cell phone?
      (same applys
      to chinese,
      korean, etc)

    2. Re:Good For Scrolls by ceeam · · Score: 2, Interesting

      First - it depends on a phone, of course. Width of about ~150..200px is probably where it starts to be comfortable. Second - this is how they teach you fast reading - by using text in narrow columns so that your eyes don't need to move left-right scanning the lines. Third - they used a pretty interesting writing system there in Japan you know.

      BTW - reading on Palm is a sheer pleasure for me now (I've read several rather big books in the last couple of months). Beats paper books all the time. With RTA-like auto-scrolling (screen rotation style, hard to explain - you need to see it though) with text-density/speed AI adjustments and anti-aliased fonts (copiable from Windows, for example) the latest PalmFiction releases are eBook heaven. I guess something similar should exist for smartphones too. Why not?

  2. mistakes by alatesystems · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I know that some day the paid editors will edit, but until then:
    "the Japanese cell-phone is more then just a phone" -- should be than

    In any case, that's lame that it runs as a J2ME app. I read stuff right now on my phone, and it's straight html and you can actually work with it, where the Jap J2ME apps are probably drm'ed to hell and back.

    I'll stick with my html, and there are plenty of PDF to html converters.

    1. Re:mistakes by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yah, this article is a few years out of date. There have been eBook readers available on mobiles for several years. I've read maybe 10 different books cover to cover on mine.

  3. Eats, shoots, and leaves? by AtariAmarok · · Score: 2, Funny
    "the Japanese cell-phone is more then just a phone" -- should be than"

    Or: "The Japanese cell phone is more! Then: just a phone"

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  4. Old News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Story dated March 18. They're using Tamagotchi now.

  5. To small? by vidarlo · · Score: 4, Informative
    Interesting discussion.

    I think that a mobile phone will have far to small screen. Even if you have a 7" screen, you can't display more than a few lines of text at once! A book has superior resolution, no expiry date, can lend it away and such. I see none of those features on a mobile phone.

    The day we can have a a5-sized sheet of e-paper, with a small 20g heavy data module, then maybe can e-books take off. But a book is something everyone know, it's universally, needs nothing but light, and works fine.

    1. Re:To small? by FRiC · · Score: 2, Informative

      Reading e-books have been quite common in China and Japan for a long time. Unlike languages that have to be spelled out, Chinese characters take up much less space and don't have to be word wrapped or hyphenated. Having a small display isn't a problem at all.

  6. Going blind... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    You are on screen 3 of 1,490,548,734 of the Great Gatsby.

    *previous page* *next page*

  7. Forgot a use by Turn-X+Alphonse · · Score: 2, Funny
    --
    I like muppets.
    1. Re:Forgot a use by FidelCatsro · · Score: 2, Funny

      Brings a new meaning to the phrase talking out your arse

      --
      The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
  8. I, for one. by AtariAmarok · · Score: 2, Funny
    I for one, look foward to reading Tolkien in this kind of format:

    "In a ho"
    le in the gr
    (then I thumb the arrow button)
    ound lived a "
    hobbit.

    I figure my thumb will implode by the time the poor dwarves get taunted at Rivendell.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  9. Only in US... by ceeam · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... this is news.

  10. The Lord of the Rings Trilogy, Cellphone Edition: by game+kid · · Score: 2, Funny
    One file to hold them all, one phone to deploy them,

    One number to buy them all and in your commute enjoy them.
    --
    You can hold down the "B" button for continuous firing.
  11. I'd use it with a little improvement by DumbSwede · · Score: 2, Insightful
    My cell-phone has 320-240 resolution, more than adequate for reading, especially if the fonts where anti-aliased and well designed. BUT the interface totally sucks currently. Perhaps if it had a couple of easy to use scroll wheels that made scrolling through text a breeze, and you could choose to view in windscreen vs. the default portrait by holding it sideways, then we can talk about reading on your cell-phone.

    Still might be nice to have for when standing in line somewhere and you've forgotten to bring a novel or magazine.

    I assume someday soon cell-phones will be powerful enough to transcribe voice accurately enough that you could navigate around on the net reasonably enough or even get some work done.

    This does give me an idea for making a cell-phone friendly version for people reading my Blogs.

  12. Bah by Nexzus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I would imagine that anyone with a Smartphone or Treo does this already.

    I've got an iPaq 6315, and one of the reasons I purchased it was to read E-books on my way to work. I used to use a old Palm to do the same thing, but I like the screen on the iPaq more, and it's one less gadget to carry around.

    --
    Karma: Can only be portioned out by the Cosmos.
  13. (In Japan) by Andy+Gardner · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hmm ive been doing this since 2002 on my old Nokia 7650. I mostly use eBook reader eBook reader for Symbian phones now on a 6600. There are loads of document readers/editors available from .pdf to MS word. I guess as the article says "Such times could be just around the corner in the United States, where cell phones are become increasingly used for relaying data, including video, digital photos and music.". Oh wait this is already available worldwide.

  14. It seems obvious to me how this would work best by saskboy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Instead of relying on a screen to visually read the eBook, you already have a built-in private speaker in the earpiece, and could give voice commands to the software to read the next page, resume, go-back, or pause. The only concern then is not to interfere with the phone's ability to take a call, and battery life might be impacted more, but a text-to-speech eBook phone could be the next big thing.

    Handsfree would be an asset, as holding the phone up to your ear for that long might be tiring, or if you're stupid enough to drive and use one, cause accidents.

    --
    Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    1. Re:It seems obvious to me how this would work best by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "but a text-to-speech eBook phone could be the next big thing"

      You know...I hate to burst your bubble, but there's this thing called "audio books" where you can listen to recordings of people reading your books. There's also a website called Audible.com that lets you download these for your iPod.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  15. set @pedantic = 1 by kahei · · Score: 3, Interesting


    Korean characters are not ideograms, except when they borrow chinese ones for names and hard words. They're phonetic, and a very elegant system it is -- or was, until the inevitable blurring and decay.

    They were founded on Confucian principles -- 'male' sounds stick up and 'female' sounds lie passively underneath them. Gotta love that Confucianism @_@

    Japanese characters are often ideograms, but to be honest the text is no more than maybe 1.5 times the density of English, for colloquial dialog. I think the key might be that the users are train passengers reading pulp novels, so that:


    1 -- there isn't room to open a book


    2 -- you don't really need to backtrack and appreciate the structure and rhythm :)

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
  16. No, THIS is how they look like by ag0ny · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I happen to have a few phone catalogs here. I have just scanned a page on a DoCoMo catalog showing the screens (and font sizes) on the latest phone models.

    The image is here. This is a 1Mbyte JPEG file, be warned.

    As you can see, this is more than enough to read a book, specially if it's written in Japanese.

  17. Re:Two words by KajiCo · · Score: 2, Funny

    That's one word and a number.

  18. Re:Books belong on paper by nutshell42 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    better link (This link is actually from the article in my first post, should have read it before posting =)

    Offers much more information, for example:

    One much-repeated fallacy about the Librie is that power is used only for turning pages. While it is true that the "ink" particles stay in position without consuming power, the electronic innards do drain the juice, hence the inclusion of a standby mode. Nevertheless, the three AAA batteries used to power the Librie should stretch to an impressive 10,000 pages, enough for about 40 novels.

    So sue me =P

    "The average book in Japan weighs 309g; we designed the Librie to weigh 300g, including case and batteries."

    just some funny trivia; and:

    To keep a tight rein on the flow of ebooks, 15 major publishers and newspapers, including Kodansha, Asahi Shimbun and Yomiuri Shimbun, have teamed up with Sony to form a company called Publishing Link and to provide content through a website known as Timebook Town.

    ...

    Readers can choose texts from seven sections, or clubs, ranging from business books to novels and may either pay ¥315 (£1.65) for a single title or join that club and gain access to up to five books a month for ¥210 (£1.10) each.

    This is important. I don't have a problem with DRM itself, I have a problem with content that costs more than physical mediums (i.e. you pay more for online renting than if you do it in real life, until Steve Jobs beat some sense into the RIAA heads they offered 64kbps WMAs that didn't allow you to do anything with them for $3, etc), that is restricted like hell. Digital files are cheaper for the publishers so I want to benefit from that.

    --
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