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Hearst's Seattle PI to Test Market E-Paper

NewsCloud writes "The Hearst Corporation plans to use the Seattle Post-Intelligencer to test market LG Philipps' recently announced flexible color E-Paper. 'The electronic P-I will carry real-time news, same as the Internet, not yesterday's news like traditional papers. Readers will turn the e-paper's pages by touching the flexible screen. And when those readers head off to work, they will roll up the electronic P-I and stuff it in their pocket, purse, or briefcase.' The announcement comes amidst the recent settlement of bitter co-operating disputes between Seattle's two newspapers and Bill Gates' recent comments on the shifting of the advertising market away from traditional media." Update: 05/18 21:51 GMT by Z : Michelle Nicolosi, Assistant Managing Editor for the PI, emailed this correction: "Someday, Seattle P-I readers may be able to carry around their news in a bendable, electronic paper device -- but not any time soon. Hearst Corp., which owns the Seattle P-I, has no plans to use the Seattle daily newspaper to test a newly announced E-paper gadget." The original site linked apparently got it wrong.

7 of 84 comments (clear)

  1. Re:paper with moving images on it by fotbr · · Score: 4, Funny

    Great. Punch the Monkey, coming soon to a paper near you!

  2. Colleges by jshriverWVU · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can see this being EXTREMELY useful in the college scene. Imagine walking into a classroom and a bluetooth or wifi transmitter sends todays lectures to your e-paper. Then you can sit at your desk and follow along and spend more time learning than trying to frantically write things down. I welcome our paper overlords :)

    1. Re:Colleges by Hatta · · Score: 4, Informative

      Hardly, writing notes just distracts you. I found I did much better in classes when I didn't take notes, whether the prof handed out lecture notes or not. Paying attention and thinking about what's being said helps me remember a topic a lot more than playing stenographer does. When I pay attention, I come out of a class with a good understanding of the topic, when I take notes I come out of the class with a list of factoids. Besides, anything I would write down is in the book anyway.

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  3. Re:paper with moving images on it by suv4x4 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I can't tell from the links if this "e-paper" will have moving images or if the images are static.

    The e-paper technology is optimized to hold a static image without electricity. This is where it excels. The image refresh rate is abysmally slow compared to even the older TFT screens.

    So if you're willing to keep your paper "on" to keep animating the images (which will waste far more electricity compared to when you only change pages and turn it off), and we're talking very low FPS image (2-3 frames per second) it may work.

  4. Re:Imagine this... by blue_moon_ro · · Score: 4, Funny

    Soooo, what am I supposed to do at work then?..... /ducks

  5. But.. by name*censored* · · Score: 4, Funny

    can you roll it up and use it to store fish and chips in?

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  6. Why e-paper? by CrankinOut · · Score: 5, Informative

    Four reasons:
    High resolution => more info/sq. inch
    High contrast => more legibility in ambient light without backlighting = longer battery life
    Static image (power only needed to change image) => longer battery life
    Light weight (no heavy glass screen or big batteries needed to create image)
    Having seen high quality e-paper on a working device, I can say that it looks like the image has been printed on a laser printer. The long battery life means that it's useful when the information changes on the order of minutes, not seconds, and you can carry it around easily because of the light weight.
    No, this is not a replacement for an active screen and GIF's and movies are not realistic uses for it.