TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics
March 29th, 2007

Hardware: Beefed-up $100 laptop, e-books on Zune, see-through batteries, and Readius reader video

By David Rothman

OLPC laptop with video chat runningE-book fans can appreciate the pluses of easy switching between, say, a book, a word-processor and a browser. You don’t just want to read. You want to be able, if you’re a student or a professional, to act on the information you pick up.

Now suppose even the $100 laptop—yes, that’ll be the price eventually—offered smooth multitasking. And so I read with interest the news of a beefed-up OLPC machine that actually uses less power.

Other wrinkles—and why e-bookers should care

Better video conferencing and more potential as an XP machine are among the other possibilities discussed by the independent OLPC News. And I can think of two more as well—Sophie and dotReader (especially if OSoft will get behind OpenReader for real). Granted, the OLPC machine was developed for the Third World. But now that the low-cost technology exists, it should also be of interest to those of us in developed countries—check out the latest news from Greece, hardly to be confused with Libya. With OLPC’s advanced screen technology, we’re indeed talking about an e-book reader in disguise at a fraction of the cost of, say, the Sony Reader. Let’s hope we’ll eventually see improved OLPC-style machines on sale at Walmart—ready to help bridge both the educational and digital divides and serve even well-off e-book readers.

Elsewhere on the hardware scene: The Zune has been turned into an e-book reader with limited capabilities, it may be possible for batteries to appear in front of e-book display via see-through plastic, and there’s a new video of the Polymer Vision Readius (via MobileRead).

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3 Responses to “Hardware: Beefed-up $100 laptop, e-books on Zune, see-through batteries, and Readius reader video”

  1. It is interesting that OLPC does not have an e-book reader. Instead it has “viewers”, which I interpret to mean page-centric rather than reflowable. The OpenDocument Viewer is the closest to an e-book reader, and since it will be based on web browser technology it may end up working something like dotReader.

    FBReader’s Pepper Pad 3 version might work “as is” on the OLPC machine, although so far as I know this has never been tried.

  2. “FBReader’s Pepper Pad 3 version might work ‘as is’ on the OLPC machine, although so far as I know this has never been tried.” Great point, Alan! Actually I think Pepper and OLPC do have some kind of a software-related connection, so your hunch could be fact in the near future if it isn’t reality already. - David

  3. Pepper works on the OLPC and guess what, OMPC is going to hand out Zunes to music-depraved kids soon too!

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