Color OLED Sony e-reader: Video shows prototype with flex-tech screen
By Ted Treanor, publishing consultant
Note: Ted Treanor, founder of NetGalley, has just joined the Gilbane Group as a senior publishing strategies consultant. Congratulations, Ted. – P.B.
The video shows a Sony prototype of an OLED color e-book reader that rocks. One complaint of my speed reading friend is that page-flipping on any current e-reader interrupts his reading when he flips to the next page while the screen pulls in the content. Wait until you see the smooth and rapid page-flipping technology from Sony. The video is from last week’s Ceatec conference in Tokyo. To succeed in publishing over the next five years, we will need to embrace digital publishing and engage e-books, e-reader technology and social media.




























October 19th, 2009 at 8:17 am
I don’t know how much stock to put in a digitally rendered reader, but the PRS-600 turns pages just about as fast if you hold down the button.
October 19th, 2009 at 8:38 am
I like the shape and potential for different coloured units.
It all seems very groovy and funky.
Any rumours on whether it has left prototype level?
October 19th, 2009 at 9:21 am
WOW! That IS an amazing techno-feat! Is this the future?
October 19th, 2009 at 9:24 am
But the experience still lacks materiality, as Dr Anne Mange suggests in her comments about screen-reading versus paper reading. It’s cool, the pages turn fast, but reading is about DIVING DEEP INTO THE PAGE, becoming immersed in the LANGUAGE of the writer, NOT JUST FLIPPING PAGES LIKE FLIPPING HAMBURGERS!
I am impressed, yet remain luddicrous (pun on Mr Luddite).
October 19th, 2009 at 6:21 pm
I think the guy who speed reads and finds the page staying behind him should anticipate the page turn so that, like playing a piano, the page is under his eyes when he needs it.
October 19th, 2009 at 6:21 pm
I think the guy who speed reads and finds the page staying behind him should anticipate the page turn so that, like playing a piano, the page is under his eyes when he needs it.