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#16 | |||
Groupie
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Karma: 854
Join Date: Dec 2007
Device: Lifebook T5010
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I've basically decided on an UMPC as a replacement for a PRS-505, but I might go with the Fujitsu tablet you mentioned. Andy |
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#17 | ||||
Pull up a chair
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Karma: 113
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: San Francisco, East Bay
Device: PRS-505
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I also played with the Fujitsu UMPC. Same opinion. I'd like to try out the HTC or the OQO - I'm a fan of keyboards. My kids all have Sony TZ series 11.1" laptops. These are just as thin and compact as the tablet PC's and UMPC's and they have other great features (like a useable keyboard). The extended battery gives you about 9 hours, but I think it's cleaner just to carry two standard batteries. If you buy the older one (the core duo, not the core2duo) and just use 512M of ram you can get over 6 hrs from a single standard battery. If you set the screen to blank after only one minute you save a lot of battery. The thing I like about the TZ is that it supports a 24" flat panel at home with very high resolution, 2049 X 1536 (or something like that). So it is one of my daughter's only device. I'm thinking about writing a keyboard driver for the Sony Reader. If one could implement a terminate-stay-ready pop-up window and some other data features, it might be possible to annotate an LRF. I don't know enough about the data format to know if that's possible yet, but usually with computers: "Where there is a will, there is a way" (not necessarily a pretty way, though). Mike |
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#18 |
Junior Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Feb 2008
Device: looking forward for one...
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Hi all,
I am a mathematician too (University of Vienna) and was looking forward for employing the e-ink for storing/reading all the research papers, books with me on the trips. I use a laptop for that purpose now, but have to admit it's hard to read from the LCD + holding/placing the laptop for long reads on the sofa is not too convenient. As well as Mike, having concluded to buy the Fujitsu flepia A4 size: https://www.mobileread.com/forums/showthread.php?t=10480 I decided to wait until it is available (it is not on sale now, correct?), but fund Mike's post. Could you please confirm that PDF lrf works for FORMULAS ? Is it possible to convert a standard latex research article from PFD to lrf RELIABLY with this tool? Norayr |
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#19 | |
Pull up a chair
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Karma: 113
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: San Francisco, East Bay
Device: PRS-505
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Why don't you post a document you are currently reading and I'll process it for you. You can download an LRF viewer here: https://libprs500.kovidgoyal.net/download_windows The text will look a little thickened and grainy in the viewer, but it will look good on the Sony Reader, but you will be able to see what a good job it does with tiny greek subscripts and symbols and such. If you want your own copy of PDFLRFwin-0.99, get it here: https://www.mobileread.com/forums/showthread.php?t=13135 Mike |
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#20 |
creator of calibre
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Karma: 27110894
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Mumbai, India
Device: Various
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Most research articles in my field (theoretical physics) have their latex sources available, so all you need to do is add a \usepackage{geometry} with the appropriate page size for the reader just before the \begin{document} and you get a nice custom formatted PDF for your reader.
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#21 | |
Pull up a chair
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Karma: 113
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: San Francisco, East Bay
Device: PRS-505
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By the way, just on the off chance: Do you know Larry Romans? I went to high school with him. He received his PhD in theoretical physics at Caltech in the early 80's. He wrote a seminal paper in 86' on symmetry breaking... a real sleeping beauty. He works at JPL now. I also have a daughter attending Azusa next door to you. Mike |
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#22 |
creator of calibre
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Karma: 27110894
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Mumbai, India
Device: Various
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The PDF that this technique produces is optimized for the 6 inch screen, so there's no need to convert it to LRF. Though I have to say that when reading papers I have an irresistible urge to scribble in the margins, which means I end up using my tablet most of the time
![]() Can't say I know Larry, though I'm sure I must've bumped into him a few times. I work on quantum information theory so I don't go to JPL often. Is your daughter planning to go to Caltech? |
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#23 | |
Pull up a chair
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Karma: 113
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: San Francisco, East Bay
Device: PRS-505
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My younger daughter, who is 16yrs old now, may go to Caltech for graduate school. Her interest has always been in biotech, but from a mathematical side. She became facinated with Dr. Cameron Jones' neat trick of identifying pathogens spectroscopically by using a common CDROM drive (with just an MD5 hash!). Her idea is to find a signature that is common to all cancer cells. Jones claims that his results are only explained by quantum entanglement. Do you know about this? Mike |
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#24 |
Junior Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Feb 2008
Device: looking forward for one...
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Thanks very much Mike, I did convert some pdf-s, and the conversion seems quite reliable.
A typical article that I am reading is: http://www.math.purdue.edu/~arshak/p...energ-corr.pdf Of course, for the articles available in ARXIVE, I do get the latex source file, and there is a special latex style that one can use for different e-readers. But unfortunately most of the papers in my direction are not available there... On a side not thought I am not sure about how it would actually look on the screen... I mean to me it seems that the conversion is basically a scaling process, in landscape mode you have the feeling that too little is shown at a time, and you have to scroll to often, and some of the fonts might look too small in portrait mode when actually shown on the device. It is too bad Sony does not sell them in Europe, so I can't check it in a shop... (while I can ask my brother to order one in US). Thanks again, Norayr |
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#25 | |
creator of calibre
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Karma: 27110894
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Mumbai, India
Device: Various
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#26 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 64201357
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Harrisburg outskirts
Device: Palms, K1-4s, iPads, iPhones, KV, KO1
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#27 |
creator of calibre
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Karma: 27110894
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Mumbai, India
Device: Various
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No I'm on the low-energy side. Quantum computing, typically with systems very near absolute zero
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#28 | |
Pull up a chair
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Karma: 113
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: San Francisco, East Bay
Device: PRS-505
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Kovid. Guys like you are shaping our future. You're making a lasting mark. Props to you, Mike BTW - I'm looking for one of Dr. Jones' more mathematical papers - there is one out there that bumps up to information theory. Last edited by Mike's Place; 02-08-2008 at 03:34 AM. |
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#29 |
creator of calibre
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Karma: 27110894
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Mumbai, India
Device: Various
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Yeah, we do
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#30 |
Recovering Gadget Addict
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Karma: 676161
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Device: iPad
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Just saw this thread. Welcome to MR, Mike!
I'd have to say that the work for these quantum physics guys and gals must be fascinating, although probably not fascinating in the way a layman might think. Just to work in quantum physics, they probably are also amazing mathematicians as well. Wood is quite right (and has a mind like a steel trap that never misses anything, doesn't he!?). I do have a Math Ph.D. in Algebraic K-Theory. And an ABD in Economics after that as well. It is frustrating, though, isn't it? I was ABD with an Economics Ph.D., plus 50% done with my dissertation, and had to leave school with an M.S. instead due to a family emergency. Never had a chance to return or work as a researcher. It worked out, though, and after all that I end up with, of all things, ... a job in IT! But I love working with computers so it worked out for me. I'm probably one of the few people crazy enough to work with computers all day and yet still rush back to my home PC after work! ![]() As far as reading math texts, I have long desired to do it, but I've just had other topics that have been more interesting (like Warped Passages by Lisa Randall, which is an awesome book, and her talks and interviews are fascinating as well!) Mostly, in terms of tech reading, I read computer materials. And, despite my love of e-books, I generally prefer to read on paper when I can. I even print out sections of online manuals for that purpose. But at least with the advent of paperless manuals, I have the option of loading up my tablet with materials to read. When I was in school, way back when, I learned to study off paper, so that may be the reason for my preference. But paper still seems easier to handle and is slightly easier on my eyes. I've also found that, thanks to folks like Kovid, while you can read technical texts on the Sony Reader if you have decent eyesight (for example, I am reading Warped Passages there), I really prefer to read technical books on a tablet pc. As mentioned previously, e-ink seems to work great for something you read beginning to end, but navigation is a bit slow and clumsy for books that you jump around in. A laptop would be great if you don't get eyestrain from it, but the form factor is not the best. Believe it or not, there is a HUGE difference between looking up at a screen on a laptop versus the flat form of a tablet on a desk or lap. I can't read a book on a desktop display or laptop, but with a tablet it's great. The only issues are heat (depending on the tablet model), battery life (which is getting better all the time, but some cheaper models only get a couple of hours), visibility in outdoor sunlight (newer screens are often pretty decent for this now) and weight (they are generally pretty heavy still, especially when a convertible form with keyboard instead of a slate form factor). But the best solution might be on the way. I'm really looking forward to the rise of cheaper UMPCs/MIDs with longer battery life and nice screens. I think that sort of device will be perfect for technical reading, and priced more reasonably than a $2000 tablet pc. Andy (recycledelectron) - you'll have to let us know how it goes for you with a UMPC if you go that way. When you choose, watch out for battery life and memory/processor speed. But if you know the limitations, it sounds like a perfect choice. And when the next generation lower-power faster mobile processors come out, things will really get interesting whether the market goes Windows or Linux! BTW, off topic, do any of you folks know how the Hadron collider is progressing? I'd sure love to know when results of experiments might start coming in. I hope the popular press covers the progress of those upcoming experiments. It's a race for fame now between Fermilab and Hadron for potential discovery of the Higgs Boson, isn't it? So maybe the Fermilab folks wouldn't mind a little more time before Hadron goes online... |
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