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The Development of E-Paper Technology

Computerworld takes a look at the development and the future of e-paper. Brought into the mainstream by e-book readers such as the Kindle, e-paper is rapidly becoming its own industry. The article notes some of the current limitations of the technology and looks ahead to a few of the upcoming ideas, such as the Fujitsu Fabric PC. Quoting: "The resolution of EPD screens is improving rapidly. Active-matrix displays like those used on the current generation of e-book readers can work at relatively high resolutions (the Kindle screen displays 167 pixels per inch), and Seiko Epson recently showed off an A4-size (13.4-in.) display prototype with 3104 by 4128 resolution, about 385 ppi, that uses E Ink's electrophoretic ink on a Si-TFT glass substrate."

3 of 117 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Cheaper ebooks, please by ndogg · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One would think that they would have figured this how with how successful their MP3 biz has been. I guess they have different folk working in the Kindle dept.

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  2. Re:The future.. by samkass · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You can't grep paper.

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  3. Re:Cheaper ebooks, please by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Marketers love people like you. Heck, why shouldn't they? Who wouldn't like to be able to price their product solely on perceived value rather than on production costs plus a reasonable profit?

    Like, back when they shifted from LPs which cost $2.00 each to make and sold for $8, to CDs which cost 50 cents each to make and sold for $15... and it worked, people bought it, people accepted the higher price, the cartel-created massively higher profit margin.

    Man, with customers like that, the sky is the limit as far as profit margins go.

    Instead of making a book for $2.00 and selling it for $10.00, they can transfer the file for a fraction of a cent and charge $9.00. Huge increase in profit margin. And sell you a book reading device for hundreds. AND eliminate the used book market. And eliminate library borrowing.

    And have you thank them for it. Damn, this "intellectual property" thing is a great scam.

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