Wednesday 10 March 2010

SAMSUNG LAUNCHES ITS FIRST EREADER

At a splashy event in New York's Time Warner Center, Samsung dove headlong into the electronic book market with the Samsung eReader, a $299 device which allows you to take notes in the margins and share content with other Samsung eReaders. The slide-open unit features a six-inch, 600-by-800-pixel, 8-gray-scale electronic ink display and uses a magnetic resonance stylus instead of a touch screen.

Samsung were also keen to make details of a deal with Barnes and Noble which will give readers access to more than a million e-books and e-magazines as well as access to Google Books.
The unit can handle ePub, Adobe PDF, text, BMP, and JPG formats. In addition to 2GB of internal memory, enough for 1,500 books or

2,400 memos, it offers a microSD slot for additional storage capacity. The eReader offers Bluetooth 2.0 connectivity for wireless headsets and other wireless audio devices and a Wi-Fi adapter for Internet access. FULL STORY

1 comment:

Unknown said...

No shortage of comments elsewhere on the coming ebook revolution. But here's one you might not have seen from the New Zealand Herald business supplement by Sean D'Souza, CE of Psychotactics and author of The Brain Audit -- Why Customers Buy (And Why They Don't).

"It may well turn out that you can continue to print a paper book as a collector's item or a special bonus, but the paper book will simply become unfeasible in the long run no matter how sentimental you feel about it.

"The paper book will fade away.

"Film in cameras faded away. CDs faded away. And the paper book will have its own ride into the sunset -- still around, but niche and largely marginalised."

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