TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics
November 11th, 2008

EeeRotate: Portrait-mode reading on the Eee PCs and other notebooks

By David Rothman

imageLaptop screens are often set up for the landscape mode—they’re wider than tall. This might be good for watching videos but not for reading e-books.

Some software such as yBook or Mobipocket can actually let you take advantage of landscape and display two "pages" on the screen at once. But what if you simply want to see one page and have the screen go up and down, in the portrait mode?

The EeeRotate solution

One solution might be a program called EeeRotate, discussed in an article from ActuaLitté. It runs under Windows XP. EeeRotate is designed for the ASUS Eee machines. bu tyou can run it on others, including the Lenovo IdeaPad S10. A download link and a few more details are here. Many thanks to Nicolas Gary at ActuaLitté.

Original French-language information: EeeRotate write-up and Lenovo-related article.

Other possible rotation solutions

But how about other solutions? Doesn’t Ficbot use an Eee-class machine? I’d welcome her thoughts and others’ on the rotation issue. Are there other solutions for people wanting to use the portrait mode? And on at least some Eee machines, is some equivalent software already bundled in? Whatever the case, EeeRotate could be useful for other notebooks without the rotation capability.

FBReader, in particular 

If you don’t need to read DRMed files and want to read E in the portrait mode, then one solution in particular might be FBReader.

This free open source program runs under XP and Linux and can display ePub, ASCII, HTML and many other formats in both portrait and landscape modes on a variety of machines, including Eee PCs. More information here.

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4 Responses to “EeeRotate: Portrait-mode reading on the Eee PCs and other notebooks”

  1. linux users can use xrandr in a terminal. like:
    xrandr -o right
    to rotate screen.

  2. They really need to make a tablet version like the XO.

  3. Heck, now all we really need is a netbook with a 180-degree hinge, so the sreen can flip all the way around, making a flat device with keyboard on one side and screen on the other.

  4. Ctrl-Alt-Arrow Key

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