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Electronic Paper's Past and Future

Iddo Genuth sends us to TFOT for his extended series of interviews around the question of how electronic paper will change our lives in the next few years. The article leads off with the "father of e-paper," Nick Sheridon, who came up with the idea almost 35 years ago at Xerox PARC, and goes on to explore how e-paper may evolve past its current incarnations in the likes of the Sony Reader.

6 of 154 comments (clear)

  1. Re:E-Readers by Kris_J · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My main thought is that since it's by Sony it'll be drenched in poisonous DRM.

    I owned a Newton Messagepad back in the day. I've read fiction, non-fiction, short stories, novels, news articles and heaps of other stuff on everything from a PDA to one a laptop connected to Second Life. The only place ebooks have a decent chance of success is to replace the two tons of textbooks most schools require their students to carry. Otherwise it's hard to beat the convenience of Dead Tree Format.

  2. It's called e-paper for a reason. by Gadzinka · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You missed the point. E-paper as the name implies isn't a replacement for computer screens. It's a replacement for a printed paper as in newspapers and books. Most of the people still get their knowledge from dead trees and e-paper for them is more or less just like paper, only better, since you can "print" on it many times.

    I am an avid ebook reader using Palms for the purpose for years, but as soon as I can get an e-paper reader without stupid limitations at a reasonable price (which for me is anything south of 250eur), I'll go that route. I mean, that would be the best of both world: paper book with the ability to (non-destructivelly) bookmark, annotate, search, copy text at will.

    Robert

    --
    Bastard Operator From 193.219.28.162
  3. Re:I don't know... by mark-t · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There are two significant advantages to epaper that LCDs and OLED's simply cannot match.

    One, epaper is a reflective technology, rather than emmissive, so the brighter the area in which one views it the better (just like a book).

    Two, epaper draws no power whatsoever to maintain a static display, none, zero, zilch. It only requires power to update the display. Once changed to what is desired, the power source could be disconnected entirely and the last image stored on the display would remain. No powered display technology can top that.

    Refresh rate is not a huge issue for epaper, as long as it is geared towards displaying content that is relatively static.

    So the biggest problems with the technology are just poor resolution and the price for color displays. Even more unfortunately, these areas do not seem to be improving at a promising rate.

  4. Re:I don't know... by martin-boundary · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That doesn't seem right. My experience is that if the screen is twice as big, one only needs to press the scroll button half as often. There's nothing more annoying than trying to read a novel while pressing a button each time one has read 5 or 10 lines of text. It's an optimization between portability factor and annoyance. There's a reason books come in standardized sizes.

  5. Re:E-Readers by Fred_A · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The obvious is simply missed. Newspapers and other formats for distributing the current events is old by the time it's printed. Get a newspaper if you want yesterday's news. Much of the stuff in papers (or at least the few proper newspapers that are still available here and there) is way beyond the one liners that passes for instant news nowadays.
    I regularly read newspapers that are days old and never minded their lack of "freshness".

    Apart from a few very specific things (maybe stock markets or the weather), freshness has no impact on the interest or validity of news.
    --

    May contain traces of nut.
    Made from the freshest electrons.
  6. Sony PRS-505 ebook reader at Borders by WillAdams · · Score: 3, Insightful

    (I wrote this up for the bookpeople mailing list....)

    The local Borders store set up a display w/ one of these yesterday and I spent a while playing with it. Initial impressions:

      - nice size, _very_ thin
      - crisp, sharp greyscale display --- very readable
      - uses GPL software (there's a list of utilities in the user manual as well as notes on where to d/l the source for the software)
      - decent interface w/ sensible buttons and okay layout
      - supports pdf, txt, rtf, bmp, jpeg, gif and png files as well as the proprietar? BBeB books (.lrf and .lrx)
      - plays mp3s
      - switches from portrait to landscape and back quite easily
      - nice magnification mode

    On the downside:

      - ~2--3 seconds to switch from one page to another sometimes one gets a distracting flashing
      - sometimes one gets ``ghosting'' if the new page has a lot of white space where text or image was before
      - the text H&J when displaying text files and .rtfs is _awful_, allowing widows and orphans and pages to end on a hyphen
      - the font used for displaying rtfs uses oblique, not italic for emphasis
      - sidebars of some of the text font characters, ``i'' most egregiously is not good resulting in poorly spaced text
      - urls in .pdfs which break at a line end become two distinct hyperlinks (this may be a problem in how the user guide .pdf was created)
      - while one can play an mp3 while reading, controlling the mp3 functions require going all the way back to the main menu --- would've been better to've over-ridden the number buttons for use as audio controls while an mp3 is playing.

    One can't help but wonder if the status bar at the bottom can be turned off --- it displays a persistent page number --- perhaps people will format .pdfs especially for this and leave page numbers off?

    More information on the reader at:

    http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/CategoryDisplay?catalogId=10551&storeId=10151&langId=-1&categoryId=16184

    Apparently this is an updated model and the text updating used to be even slower.

    Borders didn't seem to have a mechanism for selling BBeB books in their stores though which is strange since they can be stored on memory cards (Sony proprietary sticks and SD memory cards).

    William
    (who found it inspiring enough to want to put some more effort into getting his Fujitsu Stylistic to boot off of a compact flash card in a CF-IDE adapter, since he uses that to read a _lot_ of ebooks and the hard drive noise is distracting (and to make them, see http://members.aol.com/willadams/portfolio.html which includes my version of _The Book of Tea_ which is in the TeX Showcase))

    --
    Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.