Reverse Engineer Finds Kindle's Hidden Features
bensafrickingenius writes "CNET's Crave site has an interesting article on Amazon's Kindle eBook reader, and the extensive reverse-engineering that fans of the device have accomplished. The site specifically points out the work of Igor Skochinsky at the Reversing Everything website. His work on the Kindle's Root Shell has revealed some fascinating goodies: 'Among the ones uncovered and described on his blog are a basic photo viewer, a minesweeper game, and most interesting, location technology that uses the Kindle's CDMA networking to pinpoint its position. There also are some basic location-based services that call up a Google Maps view to show where you are and nearby gas stations and restaurants.'"
I'd be much more worried about buying the Communist Manifesto, Mein Kampf, The Anarchist's Cookbook, or Yertle the Turtle than Cather in the Rye.
Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
Honestly, why was it even included in the article posting? It's just a pointless summary of the content present in the original blog postings. 'course, I'm sure they appreciate the additional ad revenue...
Except you've totally missed the point. Why bother with e-Ink in a fixed location like a server room? If you have access to a computer you don't need an e-ink display, and even more so if you have a regular power supply nearby. The beauty of e-Ink is that it's incredibly low power, high contrast, and portable. The drawback is that it's got a really slow refresh rate, so it's poor for interactive or animated content. None of that fits well with a smart phone or computer (well, maybe for reading e-mail on the smart phone, but who wants to carry a smart phone which is already chunky enough in addition to an e-Ink panel). The reason eReaders are useful is because they're more portable (relative to data density) than a normal book, have search capability (or at least they should by now), and don't require any of the bulk or infrastructure more traditional devices require.
Now, I'll agree a simple ePaper display would be cool, but ultimately it would only be useful after others built devices around it, which coincidentally happens to be exactly what's happening now. I mean, you can go and order eInk displays from OEMs if you know who to talk to, but they're really aren't particularly useful without some sort of data bus to back them. Know what happens when you make a bluetooth display without any other functionality? You end up with the palm folio. See what happened to that.
Curiosity was framed, Ignorance killed the cat.
Personally, I wouldn't mind if there was a way to track lost or stolen items - especially if they contained any sort of account information whatsoever.
Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
Well, Yertle the Turtle is a book full of dangerous ideas, the turtle at the bottom over throws the entire system and topple the king leading to a non hierarchical state where all turtles live free, the final line is undoubtedly an incitement to revolution. It's exactly the sort of thing they don't want you to read.
What if Tetris was invented by Nazis?