Mon November 22 2004
Essay on the benefits of electronic paper
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02:50 PM by Alexander Turcic in E-Book General | News
The author Sushma Naik argues that "electronic paper has a better chance of succeeding [than e-books] as it mimics the conventional medium of paper but with a significant advantage." The advantage of e-paper over paper is that it can be re-used thousands of times. Imagine this scenario: The use of electronic ink and two-way wireless communication could lead to the creation of electronic books that renew themselves with new selections when readers are finished with the current book or newspaper; indeed, newspapers might be able to update themselves with the latest news while being read. |
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SnapperMail will become cross-platform mail solution
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01:05 PM by Alexander Turcic in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
The interview reveals that the next version of SnapperMail will include background comms and push capable email (similar to Blackberry's email pager). Another interesting news is that the SnapperMail team is working on a project codenamed "Triplex", a portable cross-platform mail engine that marks the expansion of SnapperMail onto other platforms (Symbian UIQ, PocketPC, MS Smartphones and a few more). [Via PalmAddicts] |
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From Palm to PPC: my new Axim x50v
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11:30 AM by Alexander Turcic in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
Rest assured I will post more about my new journey into the PPC realm in a couple of days! |
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eBookwise 1150 hands-on review
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11:24 AM by Alexander Turcic in More E-Book Readers | Fictionwise eBookwise
From his MR forum comment: At first I was kind of disappointed with the low res, half VGA screen, but that quickly changed when I started to read. My reading speed went way up because of the larger screen. I could sort of scan ahead. Also even though it is lower res, I find the 1150's serif font easier to read than the default sans-serif font on my PDA. I've always maintained that the relatively small screen size of today's PDAs is one of their biggest drawbacks - at least when it comes to reading e-books. The eBookwise's huge paperback screen size outshines conventional PDA screens. The low price ($99) plus the big screen make the eBookwise an interesting alternative to PDAs if you are looking for a dedicated e-book device. |
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Sun November 21 2004
Problems with the Treo 650s and T5s
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02:56 PM by sUnShInE in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
Not good for products that only offer a mere 23Mb of memory to play with. These issues are causing many users to cancel their orders to wait until the memory problems are addressed. Given that most of the people who buy new toys as soon as they're released are tech phreaks and developers, this doesn't bode well for a company who has already seen their market share dip below that of the Windows CE market. Via Slashdot |
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Fri November 19 2004
On intelligence, by Jeff Hawkins
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08:05 PM by Francesco in E-Book General | Reading Recommendations
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Thu November 18 2004
Tim O'Reilly Interview
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09:38 PM by ricmac in Miscellaneous | Lounge I did an interview with Tim O'Reilly, which I published in 3 parts over on my personal blog Read/Write Web. MobileRead regulars may be interested especially in Part 3, where Tim discusses eBooks and book publishing in general in the 21st century. |
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In India's news magazine Express Computer you can find an interesting
Winston Chiu was able to have an exclusive interview with
I am holding a new x50v in my hands and all I can say so far: it is a totally NEW experience! I am not sure about the Pros and Contras, since I haven't had much of a chance to play with it yet.
Brad has one of the first hands-on reviews of the rebranded eBookwise 1150 hardware e-book reader. Nice job, Brad!
The Treo 650 and the Tungsten T5 use a new FAT based nonvolatile file system, which is causing big problems.
In a
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