내 손안의 전자종이신문 'e 페이퍼'
스크랩 2008/04/03 10:26 |
조선일보가 이번에 내놓은 '아이리더E' 서비스는 한마디로 언제, 어디서나 신문, 서적을 볼 수 있는 디지털 두루마리 신문의 최초 모델이다.
이 서비스가 사용하는 단말기 누트는 'e잉크(e-ink)' 기술을 채택한 전자종이(e-페이퍼) 단말기로 휴대성과 간편성, 절전성 면에서 탁월하다. 휴대용 전자종이 신문의 기틀을 제공했다는 평가다. 전자종이 핵심 기술인 e잉크는 머리카락 지름보다 작은 미세 입자(마이크로캡슐)에 전기신호를 주는 방식으로 글·그림을 나타낸다.
◆e잉크로 탁월한 선명성
e잉크 단말기는 시각적으로 종이 특성을 유지해 독자들은 실제 신문을 읽을 때와 흡사한 느낌을 받는다. 물론 종이가 아니기 때문에 기존 신문과는 다르지만, 그래도 전자 단말기의 기존 특성에서 신문지의 느낌으로 엄청난 기술 진보를 이뤄낸 것은 사실이다. 눈부심 현상이 없어 대낮에도 선명하게 기사를 읽을 수 있다는 점이 자랑이다.
화면 해상도도 높아 종이와 같은 미려한 디자인을 보여줄 수 있다. 조선일보는 독자들을 위해 e잉크에 적합한 전용 글꼴도 개발하고 있다. 구기거나 접을 수 있는 전자종이 신문 시대를 본격적으로 열기 위해 반드시 필요한 기반 기술이다.
◆PC 없이도 언제, 어디서나 볼 수 있는 편리성
누트의 핵심 기술인 e잉크는 유리와 플라스틱·섬유는 물론이고, 심지어 종이에도 뿌릴 수 있다. 이론상으로 전기 자극을 줄 수 있는 어떤 환경에서도 e잉크를 사용할 수 있다. 언제, 어디서나 손쉽게 휴대할 수 있기 때문에 향후 필름 소재만 개선되면 휘어지거나 접히는 디지털 화면도 구현이 가능하다.
또 e잉크는 초저전력 구조를 가지고 있다는 점도 특징이다. 액정표시장치(LCD)처럼 뒤에서 불빛을 비추는 것이 아니라, 화면을 넘길 때마다 일시적으로 전기 자극을 준다. 따라서 소비전력량을 LCD의 5% 수준으로 확 낮출 수 있다.
전자종이의 가능성을 높이 평가한 해외 유력 언론들은 시험 서비스에 주력하고 있다. 지난해 11월 출시된 아마존닷컴 전자책 '킨들(Kindle)'에 콘텐츠를 공급하고 있는 미국 유력 일간지 뉴욕타임스(NYT)는 출시 후 지금까지 전자신문 판매 순위에서 줄곧 상위권을 유지하고 있다. 앞서 프랑스 경제지 레제코(Les Echos)도 전자종이 단말기를 통한 신문 서비스를 시도하기도 했다.
- ▲ 전자종이 신문 조선일보‘아이리더E’서비스가 구현된 단말기‘누트’. 두께는 0.8cm에 불과하다. 조인원기자 join1@.chosun.com
전자잉크 원천기술을 보유하고 있는 미국 E잉크(E-Ink)사는 올해부터 신문 서비스의 도입이 전 세계적으로 활발하게 이뤄질 것으로 예상하고 있다. 업계에서도 e잉크를 종이의 특성을 가장 잘 반영한 유망 전자 소재로 주목 중이다.
조선일보와 네오럭스는 아이리더E 출시 기념으로 전용 단말기(누트)와 아이리더 E 서비스 6개월 구독료를 함께 묶어 25만9000원(부가세 포함)에 내놓았다. 문의 070-7098-9938, www.nuutbook.com
Windows XP Running on the iRex iLiad!
스크랩 2008/04/02 10:59 |속도가 많이 느리다고 하는데...
여하튼 전자종이에 Window OS를 탑재했다는데 의의가 있겠네요..^^
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| Windows XP Running on the iRex iLiad! | 2008-04-01 |
This has been a project a long time in the making. A lot of people complain about the lack of functionality of the iLiad OS. Linux is great, but there aren't a lot of good application choices for it. So Windows is the obvious solution. With windows running, we can run a full featured Firefox, Mobipocket Reader, Adobe Acrobat, even Outlook!
It doesn't run very fast, and I had to modify XP's boot sequence to work on the iLiad, along with a custom display driver. But overall, I think there's a lot of potential.
Here's a video of it booting:
There are some more screenshots and pictures attached.
컬러전자종이 해상도 향상 - LPL
스크랩 2008/01/05 10:38 |LPL가 작년 초에 컬러전자종이 플로토타입 발표를 하더니, 이번에는 해상도를 높여서 개발 보도자료를 내보냈다. 1년에 한 번씩 조용하다 싶으면 한마디씩 하는 거 같다...작년에도 1년 후 상용화 이야기를 했는데, 정말 내년에는 상용화가 될까? ^^;
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둘둘 말고 다닌다 ‘전자신문시대’ 성큼
세계 최고 해상도 플렉서블 디스플레이 LG필립스LCD가 개발
탁상훈 기자
전자 책이나 마치 종이 신문처럼 둘둘 말아서 들고 다닐 수 있는 소형 전자 신문 시대를 열어 줄 세계 최고 화질(畵質)의 컬러 플렉서블 디스플레이(flexible display: 휘어지는 화면표시장치. 일명 전자종이)〈사진〉가 개발됐다. ‘플렉서블 디스플레이’란 종이처럼 말아 넣거나 휠 수 있게 개발된 전자 제품 화면 구현용 부품을 말한다.
LG필립스LCD는 3일 “컬러 기준으론 세계 최고 해상도(1280×800)를 갖춘 14.3인치 컬러 플렉서블 디스플레이를 개발했다”고 밝혔다. LG필립스LCD 관계자는 “이는 예전에 비해 4배 정도 해상도가 개선된 것으로, 실제 이 부품으로 전자 책이나 작은 판형 크기의 전자 신문을 만들어도 독자들이 보기에 무리가 없는 수준”이라고 말했다.
지금까지 흑백 플렉서블 디스플레이 중에는 이보다 더 고해상도의 제품이 나온 적이 있으나, 컬러를 지원하는 플렉서블 디스플레이 중에 이런 고해상도 제품은 이번이 처음이다. LG필립스LCD는 “이르면 내년부터 이 제품을 양산(量産)할 계획”이라며 “앞으로 이보다 훨씬 규격이 큰 세계 최고 해상도의 컬러 디스플레이도 선보일 것”이라고 밝혔다.
소니 eBook Reader PRS-505 출시
스크랩 2007/10/03 08:49 |드디어 10월 2일 PRS-505 가 출시 되었습니다.
모바일리드에서 새로 출시된 소니리더 PRS-505에 대한 분석 기사를 실었네요.
PRS-500 과 다른 점은 e-ink 차세대 버전을 통해 반응속도와 화면 밝기가 강화되었다는 점과 디자인 변경, 그리고 직접 PDF,text,jpg 지원, USB2.0 지원을 한다는것입니다. 더욱 중요한 점은 Adobe Digital edition 을 지원하여 어도비의 출판툴( InDesign CS3 )을 통해 기존의 PDF 문서들을 변환해서 지원하리라는 점 입니다.
p.s
한국의 NUUT 가 소프트웨어적으로 하드웨어적으로 PRS-505 의 비전을 공유하면 좋겠네요.
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Sony Reader PRS-505:
- launch: Online and in-stock at the SonyStyle.com store October 2, 2007 (should be appearing in retail stores by the 5th)
- case in silver (PRS-505/SC) and dark blue (PRS-505/LC)
- dimension: 175mm by 122mm by 8mm
- weight: 9oz (~255g)
- main navigation on the right
- latest generation of E Ink panel (Sony’s not calling it Vizplex because they don't feel that the name will mean anything to the general public, but we know what it is) with improved contrast, increased reflectance, faster refreshes, and 8 shades of gray. And of course: 6-inch diagonal, 800x600
- capacity for 160 typical e-books (192 MB of memory reserved for the user)
- battery capacity: 7,500 page turns
- expansion: Memory Stick Duo (up to 8GB) and SD Card (up to 2GB) slots for a combined storage potential of 10 GB.
- supported document formats: BBeB, PDF, RTF, TXT, JPG
- other: USB 2.0, USB mass storage capability (direct document transfer), Reader-PC autosync functionality (supports a folder for automatically syncing files to the PRS-505)
eBook Library 2.0 PC is a (probably modest) upgrade of what was previously the Sony Connect desktop software. - AC wall charger optional
- Initial price: US $300
| Sony Reader PRS-505 - MobileRead's Conference Call with Sony |
It is past Midnight EDT on October 2, 2007, and things may be now be spoken of which could not be spoken of before.
You may remember that shortly before the launch of the Sony Reader (PRS-500) Sony invited several members from the Blogosphere out to San Diego to preview the device. Bob Russell and myself were fortunate enough to be included in that group then.
This year, before the launch of the PRS-505, Sony's PR Team invited Bob, Alex and myself to participate in a conference call to get the skinny on the new model, and generally discuss both it and Sony's plans for e-books in general. Our thanks to Sony for sharing some of the "nside scoop" on the new member of the Sony Reader line of devices.
By now, you've seen the Press Release and the updated spec sheet, so there's no need to go into that in detail, but I'd like to give you my impressions of some of the implications of the new model, now that we can talk about it officially.
The conference call was fast-paced and technical in nature, with the three of us firing off questions to the Sony Rep (one of the marketing team members) and the PR firm representative. I'll try to bring some sort of order from the chaos.
Let's start with the Library software. It's going to be a replacement for ConnSoft, and will look pretty similar as far as the interface goes, but with some new features. It will support the AutoSync folder feature that was mentioned in the specs. It's not entirely clear how exactly it will handle syncing, but it looks like files placed in the folder will be automatically loaded onto the 505 when it is connected, with the PC side overwriting the Reader side as far as adding books goes. The bookmarks and such should be preserved, as they're not saved as part of the actual book files in the first place.
For those who have a PRS-500, it will simply replace the ConnSoft without changing any collections, etc. that you may already have set up. The 505 does require the new software to work, and it should be available for downloading in the near future for those of us who have 500's who want to use it. No, the autosync folder function won't work for the 500, unfortunately.
There are some changes in the 505's menus and functions that are worthy of note. While it is still a flat file system (the Sony Rep specifically pointed out that their thinking is that the flat file approach is much more straightforward for less technically minded users), there are some new options for finding books that are very interesting. First of all, there is the ability to sort by date (presumably date added) and alphabetically by author. Also, for those with a lot of books, it scans the list and presents an alphabetical list of books in chunks, i.e. A-C, D-F, and so on. These categories are then directly available with the number keys, which will speed jumping through the book listings considerably. Add these user interface improvements to the display contrast and refresh time improvements, and it should make for a marked improvement in the overall usability of the device.
I would also like to address a few improvements we hoped for, but were items that didn't yet change. I know you'll ask about them if we don't talk about them here, because we did. On a couple of the points the Sony rep commented that he didn't know why they hadn't changed them either.
First of all, there are still no images in RTF files. So if you want pictures in your e-books on the Reader, you'll have to choose PDF or BBeB format. Secondly, PDF handling is the same as it was (this probably won't change until Digital Editions support comes around). The Reader does great with specially formatted PDFs, but not so good for full-sized PDF pages. For now, you'll need to look at a tool like PDFLRF to make a PDF more readable. With respect to the text on the screen, you can't invert (flip top to bottom) the display. And you still need the Sony Software to buy Sony books, which still means a Windows PC. A computer is also needed to delete books from the main memory.
One thing that hasn't changed, but that we've all apparently missed somehow, is that when the audio player is running, there's a speaker icon that appears on the bottom corner (left, I think) of the display. We've wanted a way to tell when it was running, and there it was all along. I suppose we've missed it because we're not running the audio player.
Okay, back to the good new stuff! They've implemented a Goto Page function! Pressing the number keys in a book will now bring up a box to enter the page you wish to jump to, and, presumably the "Enter" button will make the jump.
There is going to be a clock setting function, but word is that it'll be hidden somewhere, I'm sure we'll find it in short order. This is meant to address the "lost in time" effect that those of us who go for a couple of weeks without connecting to a PC have experienced on the 500. The clock is still used internally, and not displayed on the screen. (Of course, there is now a popular hack available for the PRS-500 that displays the current time.)
Battery life has been one of the very strong assets of the PRS-500, we were delighted to hear that the battery life of the PRS-505 is similar, rated for up to 7,500 page turns. The Auto Sleep mode (where it blanks the screen after 60 minutes) will still be there, but it will be an optional feature and it will be defaulted to be off. So if you like this feature, you'll have to turn it on manually, if you don't, you're all set right out of the box.
The 505 also implements a full off "Shutdown Mode" option via the menus. This is basically the same thing that Nogg's "off hack" does, now, but it's incorporated into the software directly. The boot time to return from this is reportedly somewhat faster than the 500's but we have no numbers on that yet.
One sad note, the AutoLoad.XML function that drives all of our wonderful hacks has been identified as a security issue, so, alas the AutoLoad function won't work on the 505, which means we'll have to find another way to hack it. Incidentally, Sony said that the development team is very aware of the community user tools and hacks, and is impressed with the creative types that are producing such software.
However, since the 505 will be recognized as a USB Mass Storage Device, that may not be all that much of a challenge. Yes, you read that correctly, the PRS-505 will be recognized as a USB Mass Storage Device. Furthermore, that recognition should be good for all the major OSs out there.
Going along with that, Sony's software will not be required to charge the 505 from a USB port. Naturally they can't assure that it will work with every crazy USB port in the world, but it should charge from all the big hitters: Windows, MacOS, Lin/Unix, etc. The 505 will charge from USB even when the battery is totally flat, which is why Sony has opted to make the AC charger an option rather than included. And there won't be a cradle for this one.
While we're on the subject of accessories, the old circle connector won't be found on the 505 (and there was much rejoicing). They've moved to a cover that attaches along the left edge of the Reader at the top and bottom, which means the back of the cover can move away from the device as easily as the front (you can hold both covers and it will swing from the 'binding' just like a 'real' book). That will make it easier to reach the reset button. The included cover is now upgraded to have be leather-like, and the optional 'fashion' covers will be leather covers that sport several pockets for things like memory cards, business cards/ID cards, and even one for boarding passes. For those who like the clip on lights, the existing light sold by Sony will still work with the new device covers. That would seem to imply that most clip on lights that work with the 500 will also work with the 505.
Speaking of memory cards, the 505 has two slots, one for Memory Stick Duo (up to 8GB) and a separate one for SD (up to 2GB) -- for a combined 10GB of external storage. But you saw that in the spec sheet, didn't you? What you didn't see, is that we now have word that the 505 will support Collections on memory cards! How often have we longed for that? Internal available user memory is 192meg, which is a big step up from the previous model.
Now some things we discussed looking toward the future. Naturally these things can change, and can be altered by outside factors that can't be foreseen, but it's good to get their present frame of mind on these matters. The Sony Rep was quite clear that Sony is committed to assuring ongoing access to books purchased at the ConnStore, even with the announcement of ePub support on the Reader. No statement can yet be made on the announced Borders/Sony e-bookstore however.
They specifically stated that Sony is committed to have Adobe Digital Editions support on the 505 model -- when Adobe gets around to completing the software, of course. Sony and Adobe are working together to make this happen. When there is Digital Editions support, there is potential for an astronomical increase in available content, and the Reader is likely to be the first device to work with Digital Editions.
We specifically asked about Mobipocket support, and by extension, other secure reading format support. Sony's response was very interesting: they said they weren't interested in locking potential users out of their Readers, that while they are open to entertaining the notion of other reading applications on the PRS line, but that those who control those other applications may not be so open to the idea.
We also asked if we might see some of these firmware changes and things like .epub support on the original PRS-500 model, and the response was that they are still considering it (hardware differences seem to play some part here as to feasibility of various bits), but they aren't ready to announce anything, and they cautioned us that some of it may not happen at all. It's to be expected that most of the development resources, especially for new features, will be devoted to newer devices, not older models.
Overall, it was a very interesting, and yes, fun discussion. It's always great to have a chance to pick the brains of those who are really in the know, and I'd like to thank Sony for giving us that opportunity. The impression I came away with was that this should be an exciting new installment in the PRS line. Yes it's an incremental improvement, but they've included a lot of the things we would have liked on the 500, suggesting that they do listen. Further, the comments they offered looking to the future of the PRS line are extremely encouraging in terms of their commitment to the Reader concept. Sony is encouraged by convincingly stronger than expected sales with the PRS-500, and is convinced that there is a lot of future potential that they intend to pursue.
In terms of overall feel, the device was described as being a smooth metal texture. It is said to have a more solid feel and feel like a better quality build. The body is stronger and reinforced. And yet it's a bit lighter and thinner. Due to extra length, you might not notice the lightness, however, as a shifted center of gravity leaves the feeling that it is firm and solid in your hand. The look of the screen surface is very similar, except for the previously mentioned improvement in contrast. The joystick control has been replaced with a directional button and a separate menu button.
The PRS-505 appears to have really taken a significant step forward with respect to becoming a product that can gain wide acceptance from the general consumer market. While the price will continue to be a hurdle for some, the better interface, improved page turn speed,and display contrast will make the difference for others. Sony has very carefully chosen features that will keep operation simple and straightforward.
Many have been anxious to see the expansion of the Sony Reader market outside of the U.S. Unfortunately, it is apparently a matter of not just the general complexities of worldwide product development and support, but it also involves development of content agreements which are currently U.S. based. Sony feels that the Reader remains a standout product in terms of its presence in the retail market, the integrated book store, and the overall usability and stability of the devices.
Availability of the PRS-505 is set for October 2, 2007 at the online Sony Style store, and soon afterwards at retail stores. Retail price will be approximately $300. Purchases before January 31 will receive a credit for the purchase of 100 available CONNECT Classics titles, and must be redeemed by February 29.
Okay, that's enough rambling on my part, let the frenzy begin: what do you think on the matter?
Posted on behalf of Bob Russell, Alexander Turcic, and myself, by virtue of the fact that I'm in the latest time-zone so I have the easiest time staying up for the Midnight EDT deadline :)
e-ink 기반 Cybook 출시가 연기된다고 하네요.
스크랩 2007/09/28 08:38 |연기라....또 다른 이유가 있는 것이 아닐까요?
대만의 생산라인에서 양산이 계속 늦어지는 것 말이죠...^^;
아래에서는 PDF 지원을 하기위해서가 아닐까라고 말은 하는데...속내는 또 모르겠네요.
여하튼 2007년은 e-ink 전자책이 여러버전으로 시도된 해로 기억되겠네요.
2008년에는 콘텐츠가 접목되어서 개화를 해야할텐데 말이죠.
p.s
간만에 포스팅을 했더니, 스마트 에디터라는 편집기로 글쓰는 폼이 바뀌었네요..^^
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Bookeen sent word in that the release of the Cybook Gen3 e-reader will be delayed until October due to "slight adjustments in the final steps of mass production." On the positive side, they also reported that, unlike previously suggested, support for Adobe PDF will now be included in the initial release.Related: Video Demo of the Bookeen Reader, Cybook Still Available in September?
Adobe 에서 Sony Reader 와 손잡고 전자책 뷰어 정식 릴리즈!
스크랩 2007/06/20 11:54 |어도비에서 전자책뷰어를 정식릴리즈하네요.
PC와 맥용 우선 출시하고 소니에서 곧 소니리더에 탑재할 예정이라고 합니다.
Sony has committed to embed Adobe Digital Editions technology into its portable reader product line.
리눅스 플랫폼과 다국어 지원은 2007년 하반기로 예정하고 있군요.
Adobe Digital Editions for Linux platforms and localized versions in French, German, Japanese, Korean and Chinese are expected to be available in the second half of 2007.
소니리더가 사용하는 e-ink 디스플레이의 특성상 Adobe Digital Editions 의 플래쉬 포맷을 지원하기가 쉽지 않을 것 같은데...여하튼 PDF와 xml 포맷의 다양한 전자책을 InDesign CS3 에서 곧바로 컨버팅해서 Adobe Digital Editions 에서 읽을 수 있다는 것이 가장 매력적인 것 같습니다.
모바일 전자책리더로 소니리더와 손잡고 해외시장에서 아마존의 전자책 포맷인 모비포켓을 제치고 전세계 전자책뷰어 표준으로 자리를 잡을 지 향후의 행보가 주목됩니다.
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Adobe Digital Editions 1.0 Now Available
For immediate release
Top Publishers and Sony Support New Digital Publishing Experience
SAN JOSE, Calif. — June 19, 2007 — Adobe Systems Incorporated (Nasdaq:ADBE) today announced the release of Adobe® Digital Editions 1.0, a new software application built from the ground up for acquiring, managing and reading eBooks, digital newspapers, and other digital publications. Available as a free download for Microsoft® Windows® and Macintosh systems, Adobe Digital Editions software transforms the digital reading experience and offers new creative possibilities for publishers.
Leading publishers, online retailers and channel partners have announced their support for Adobe Digital Editions today (see separate quote sheet ). By using a new export feature built into Adobe InDesign® CS3, publishers can easily create new Adobe Digital Editions-ready content, helping to significantly reduce cost and conversion time. In addition, with versions for mobile platforms and reading devices also planned, Sony has committed to embed Adobe Digital Editions technology into its portable reader product line.
“Adobe Digital Editions will revolutionize how publishers deliver eBooks and other digital content and how consumers experience it,” said Rob Tarkoff, senior vice president, Corporate Development at Adobe. “The combination of Adobe Digital Editions, InDesign CS3 and a new generation of hardware from innovators like Sony shows that digital publishing is front and center for content owners -- and millions of readers who are looking forward to innovations in the delivery of their favorite works.”
“We’re excited to work with Adobe to pioneer new applications for eBooks and other digital documents,” said Ron Hawkins, vice president of portable reader systems marketing at Sony Electronics, Inc. “This collaboration will give us the opportunity to expand our offerings to a larger audience and new markets, allowing individual consumers, businesses, and other customers to take advantage of the portability and ease of use of Sony’s Reader products with a wider spectrum of content.”
With native support for Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) and XML-based publications, Adobe Digital Editions already works seamlessly with more than 150,000 commercially published titles. Using Adobe Digital Editions 1.0 readers will find that content automatically re-flows, adapting to different screen sizes and support for Adobe Flash® software promises to enhance digital publications through the integration of rich audio and video.
Features and Enhancements
The public beta of Adobe Digital Editions generated more than 300,000 downloads in less than six months and user feedback influenced the feature set. Adobe Digital Editions now enables users to annotate content through bookmarks, highlights and text notes. The library view offers advanced organization with multiple bookshelves. A slick new user interface enhances zooming and the overall reading experience, while support for the new IDPF Open Publication Standard (OPS) for XHTML-based re-flowable eBooks, guarantees a seamless viewing experience.
The Adobe Digital Editions 1.0 download is less than 3MB and leverages Adobe Flash Player technology to enable quick installation as part of the content download. The integration with Adobe Acrobat® 8 and Adobe Reader® 8 applications allows users to install and launch Adobe Digital Editions automatically within these industry standard products.
Optional Content Protection
Adobe Digital Editions works in conjunction with Adobe Digital Editions Protection Technology (ADEPT), a new, hosted content protection service to guard publisher’s rights while maintaining superior ease-of-use for consumers. ADEPT supports the company’s proven Adobe® Content Server (ACS) technology and protects both PDF and reflow-centric OPS XML eBooks. Purchase and lending business models include library lending, subscription, and ad-supported models. Details can be viewed at www.adobe.com/go/digitalpublishing .
Adobe Digital Editions 1.0 will be unveiled at the O’Reilly Tools of Change Conference in San Jose on June 19.
Pricing, Availability and System Requirements
Adobe Digital Editions is available immediately as a free download for Microsoft Windows® and Macintosh® systems at www.adobe.com/go/getdigitaleditions . Adobe Digital Editions for Linux platforms and localized versions in French, German, Japanese, Korean and Chinese are expected to be available in the second half of 2007.
Recommended system requirements are Windows Vista, Windows XP with Service Pack 2 (SP2) or Windows 2000 Service Pack 4 (SP4), 500Mhz or faster Intel® Pentium® processor, 128MB of RAM, and a monitor with at least 800 x 600 screen resolution. For Macintosh systems, Adobe Digital Editions requires Mac OS X version 10.3.9 (or higher), 500MHz or faster PowerPC® G4 or G5 processor and 128 MB of RAM. For Intel based Macintosh systems, Adobe Digital Editions requires Mac OS X version 10.4.8 (or higher), 500MHz or faster processor and 128 MB of RAM.
About Adobe Systems Incorporated
Adobe revolutionizes how the world engages with ideas and information - anytime, anywhere and through any medium. For more information, visit www.adobe.com .
###
2007 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All rights reserved. Adobe, the Adobe logo, Acrobat, Flash, and Reader are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the United States and/or other countries. Windows is either a registered trademark or a trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. Macintosh and Mac OS is a trademark of Apple, Inc., registered in the United States and other countries. Intel and Pentium are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or Its subsidiaries in the U.S. and other countries. PowerPC is a trademark of International Business Machines Corporation in the United States, other countries or both. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
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Printable version
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Contacts
Stefan Offermann
Adobe Systems Incorporated
408-536-4023
출처 : http://www.adobe.com/aboutadobe/pressroom/pressreleases/200706/061907DigitalEditions.html
SID 2007 e-ink 컬러동영상 지원까지 언급하다
스크랩 2007/05/25 12:10 |SID 2007 박람회를 기점으로배포된 e-ink 보도자료에 따르면 전자종이에서 동영상을 구현할 정도의 변환 속도를지원하겠답니다. 컬러 디스플레이와 구부리고, 말아서 보는 디스플레이 정도가 한계이리라 생각했는데, 꼭 그렇지 않다는 자신감 일까요? 보도자료에는 각종 상용화 제품들을 소개하고 있습니다.
Shipping Products - High ResolutionShipping Products - Segmented Displays
하단에는 기사 원문을 옮겨봅니다.
| Press Release | Source: E Ink Corporation |
E Ink Shows Latest Products and Research Advances
Tuesday May 22, 10:41 am ET
"Step by step, the display industry is building a vibrant ecosystem for electronic paper displays based on E Ink imaging films," said Russ Wilcox, president and CEO of E Ink. "There has been a surprising acceleration of flexible displays, and we can now foresee a coming wave of paper-thin, bendable, and even rollable screens in consumer products."
"Our research team is demonstrating here an ultra-bright ink that is approaching 50 percent reflectance of ambient light compared to 35 percent in shipping monochrome products," said Dr. Michael McCreary, vice president of Research and Advanced Development at E Ink. "Moreover, the advanced ink is capable of high switching speeds. We have put it all together and today we are unveiling our first-ever color research prototype that can play smooth color video."
Shipping Products - High Resolution
E Ink has emerged as the de facto standard for electronic books, a growing device category that aims to make digital reading a convenient experience. The publishing industry is larger than the music, movie and video game industries combined.
Currently available products that incorporate E Ink High Resolution Displays include:
- ARINC's eFlyBook, General Aviation eReader, www.eflybook.com
- Emano Tec's Medtab 100, www.emanotec.com
- eREAD Technology's STAReBOOK, www.stareread.com/en/reader.html
- iRex Technologies' iLiad, eReader, www.irextechnologies.com
- Jinke's Hanlin V Series eReader, www.jinke.com.cn/compagesql/English/index.asp
- Polymervision's Readius, www.Polymervision.com
- Sony's Personal Reader (PRS-500): www.learningcenter.sony.us/assets/itpd/reader/
Samsung Electronics achieved a world's first at the SID event with a largest-ever high resolution E Ink Vizplex display at 40" diagonal - the size of a large flat-screen TV, which consumes very little power: 300mW at one frame per minute, or 1/500 that of a conventional LCD display. Such a display using electronic ink would be appropriate for digital signage and office information applications.
E Ink congratulated Dr. Alex Henzen of iRex Technologies for receiving a Special Recognition Award at the SID 2007 event "in recognition of his contributions to the development of electrophoretic displays and the integration of these displays into an innovative electronic-book product" for his work on the iLiad, which supports direct pen input through a touch interface.
Shipping Products - Segmented Displays
E Ink Segmented Displays contain discrete drive segments that can be controlled individually to convey information using letters, numbers, and/or pre-defined icons. E Ink provides custom display cells for electronics companies who seek the ultimate in low-power, paper-thin, and curvable or non-rectangular segmented displays with a bright, bold look.
Currently available products featuring E Ink Segmented Displays include:
- ART Technologies, Ltd., Phosphor Innovation E Ink Watch
- Lexar's Jumpdrive Mercury and Secure Plus II USB memory sticks, www.lexar.com/jumpdrive/jd_mercury.html
- Funkwerk Information Technologies Karlsfeld GmbH's Pariflex DRFID (bar code Display on a RFID tag) Smartlabel, www.pariflex.org
- Motorola's MOTOFONE F3, GSM Mobile Phone, direct.motorola.com/hellomoto/motofone/
- Seiko G300, Ladies Electronic Ink Fashion Watch, www.seiko.com
E Ink congratulated Motorola as its Motofone product won the Silver Award for "Display Application of the Year 2007" from the Society for Information Display at this year's event.
Development Tools To Support Market Growth
E Ink showed new development tools to accelerate the next crop of award-winning products:
- E Ink AM200 Prototyping Kit in 5", 6", 8", 9.7" panel sizes www.eink.com/kits
- Dialog Semiconductors, Segmented Development Kit www.dialogsemi.com
- Seiko-Epson, Segmented Display EPD Evaluation Board, www.epson.com
- Prime View International, High Resolution Prototype Development Kits, www.pvdisplay.com
E Ink Adopted Industry-Wide for Flexible Display Development
Elsewhere in the SID exhibit hall, several other flexible displays based on E Ink's imaging film achieved notable advances and were available for public view:
- Arizona State University Flexible Display Center flexible display on steel foil
- LG.Philips.LCD is demonstrating the world's first 14" color flexible display on steel foil
- Primeview International (PVI) will be demonstrating a flexible display on plastic
- Samsung is showing a 14.3" color flexible display on plastic
Roadmap for Video Speed in Electronic Paper Displays
The E Ink's color video prototype mentioned above is a 6-inch diagonal display with 300x400 resolution and RGBW sub-pixels and is capable of switching at up to 30 frames per second. It is expected that the video switching capability may require several years to reach the market.
About E Ink
E Ink Corporation is the world's leading supplier of electronic paper display (EPD) technologies. E Ink's technology is ideal for many consumer and industrial applications spanning handheld devices, eBooks, PC-accessories, watches, clocks, and public information displays and promotional signs. E Ink is a private corporation that includes among its investors and strategic partners TOPPAN Printing Company, Royal Philips Electronics, The Hearst Corporation, Intel Capital, CNI Ventures, a division of Gannett Co., Inc, Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., Vossloh Information Technologies, and Motorola, Inc. E Ink news can be found at: www.eink.com.
출처 : http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/070522/20070522005969.html?.v=1
Window Vista SideShow 지원 가정용 e-ink Reader
스크랩 2007/05/18 13:34 |다음 주 부터 SID 2007 (롱비치 디스플레이 박람회, http://www.sid.org/conf/sid2007/sid2007.html) 가 있다보니, 각종 디스플레이 관련 보도자료들이 쏟아 지고 있네요. 45년째 진행하는 행사이니 꽤 역사가 있군요. LG필립스 컬러플렉서블 디스플레이 관련 기사에 이어, 리카비전 이라는 곳에서 Window Vista와 e-ink를 연계한 디바이스 보도자료가 배포되었습니다. 아직 데모버전 등은 보이지 않지만, 어떤 식으로 구현되는지 자못 궁금하네요.
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The company product brochure (pdf warning) says that "The Ricavision Home E-Reader is a small handheld portable device wirelessly connected to a PC running Windows Vista that functions as a normal enhanced device for Windows SideShow. The display is of the reflective eInk type, which is optimized for reading documents, so that reading is as comfortable with the Home E-Reader as it is from print on paper. The Ricavision Home E-Reader enables the user to cache a large number of pages, including entire books, on the device so it can also be used out of wireless range of the Windows Vista-based PC. The Home E-Reader also includes stylus capability. It uses SideShow as the primary GUI and Windows Vista as the means by which pages are actually rendered for display on the device." There don't appear to be any indication of availability, detailed specs or pricing, so it's not clear if this is just a concept device or a concrete product coming soon. |
출처 : http://www.mobileread.com/forums/showthread.php?t=10933
Andrew Marr (뉴스편집장 ,BBC기자)의 eBook 읽기
스크랩 2007/05/13 10:31 |가디언지에 iLiad 를 읽고 있는 Andrew Marr (뉴스편집장 ,BBC기자)가 사진과 함께 기사화 되었네요. NUUT도 유명인의 독서모습과 사진 덧붙여 리뷰를 실을 수 있었으면 합니다. 덧붙여 북토피아 등과 책읽기 캠페인(http://blog.naver.com/gun0921.do?Redirect=Log&logNo=20017248710)도 좋을 거 같네요.
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ling up with a good ebook
It has long been predicted that traditional books are about to be replaced by little machines on which you can download any novel you fancy. But the technology has never really been up to the job - until now. Here Andrew Marr, who treasures his smelly, beautiful library of real books, spends a month with one of the new gadgets
Friday May 11, 2007
The Guardian 
Andrew Marr reading a new ebook. Photograph: Graeme Robertson
If, that is, the bookshops are still there, and have not been put out of business by ebooks - digital versions that can be read on computers or hand-held devices. But I'm a sceptic. A very long time ago, 10 years or more, I vividly remember being at Davos for the rich-or-clever people's annual frolic in the snow, and being assured that epaper - "electronic paper" - was about to transform the way we read. There was a minor frenzy of excitement about this stuff, being developed by MIT in the States and the big electronics firms. Here was an electronic display that could be rolled up and stuck in your pocket. Soon, I was told, we would all be using it to download our newspapers and books at railway stations, or wherever. There were articles back then about the death of the book, and the death of paper. They have been coming ever since. And yet, for most of us, the ebook has never arrived.
Why? After all, most of us are broadband-connected, getting more and more information from websites, accustomed enough to reading screens of one kind or another. Many of us download more music than we buy from shops in CD form, and the same will soon be true of films. We are starting to use online versions of newspapers; and I have the BBC's news online flickering in the corner much of the time. It has probably become my number-one source of news, ahead of the telly or radio bulletins. So why the tortoise progress of the ebook?
It's partly that traditional books are such good technology, even compared with CDs or newspapers. They are a little larger than the hand, extremely portable, nice to hold and look at and remarkably cheap. Yes, there is an environmental issue but most are made of cheap, sustainable woodpulp. Simple technology that works is unlikely to go out of fashion. Those futurologists of the 1960s who predicted a world of silver jumpsuits and food-pills forgot that socks, buttons and saucepans were simple technology that worked, and the same is true of books.
Beyond that, most ebook readers simply aren't good enough, whether they're dedicated devices or the multi-purpose palmtop computers made by the likes of Palm and Hewlett-Packard. They're fine to use for an hour or two when you are sitting upright in even indoor light, but they're pretty useless when you are travelling, sitting in the garden or slumped in the bath. The ebook reader that is as easy on the eye as a real book, and as quick to flick through, and as portable, hasn't arrived.
Or perhaps it has. Enter Sony's Reader and iRex's Iliad, which are being touted as the first really useable, easy-to-read products. I've had an Iliad for a month to try out. It costs 449 plus VAT, or slightly more with a handsome leather case that makes it look like a slightly larger, thinner Filofax. I have not been offered one for free, nor would accept that. So it has been a fair, straightforward trial: bibliophile, or perhaps bibliomaniac, meets book-killer.
I should say, at the outset, that Iliad's British champion, who has been immersed in the project since the idea first occurred to him on holiday with his wife in Rome two years ago, denies that it is a book-killer. Peter Blanchard, who found that iRex was already ahead of him, is an expatriate Scouse engineer and management connsultant now throwing himself into the ebook revolution from the unlikely setting of a Welsh hilltop. He sees it as a handy, portable tool that can accommodate novels and other books, certainly, but also newspapers, work notes, jottings and so on. The one that was sent to me already had downloaded on to it four books by Arthur Conan Doyle, two Brontovels, 10 by Dickens, four apiece by George Eliot and DH Lawrence, three Dostoevskys, James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist and Ulysses, Jane Austen's complete works, and ditto Lewis Carroll, both big fat Tolstoys, five Thomas Hardy novels and quite a lot of poetry. That's a hefty bookshelf, accommodated in a device only a little over a centimetre thick and in breadth and depth about the size of a closed hardback book.
It is meant to be read, at length, and its claim is that the screen is good enough to allow you to read, even a Tolstoy, even in sunlight, and actually enjoy the experience. It works with a basic menu, four buttons separated into news (of which more anon), books, docs and notes. There is a small pen-like stylus attached to the back, which lets you make notes or add comments to your documents and - the best innovation - a thin silver bar on the left of the screen that you flick with your thumb to turn the pages. It is charged, like a laptop, mobile or any other similar device, and the battery should see easily you through a day's reading and writing. For those interested in detailed specifications, I can say it weighs about the same as a medium-sized banana. It powers up quickly and turns off easily.
Here is the first crucial thing: the screen does work. By "work", I mean that the words stand out clearly without shimmering, and that you can certainly read it outside, in dappled light and direct sunlight, as you would not be able to read a normal computer screen. The effect is matt, not shiny, and black-and-white, not colour. Well, to be precise, not black-and-white so much as dark grey characters on a light grey background, which is perhaps part of the secret. The font is modern - not elegant, but effective - and you get far fewer words to the "page" than with a traditional book, though the half-inch borders and generous spacing between paragraphs help you to read. I tried it, reading some Tolstoy and then some Conan Doyle, in the garden, slumped in a chair inside, on a sofa in a dimmish room, and in the back of a car. In each place, it was easy to read; I have spent plenty of time reading it and so far, haven't felt any eyestrain, or no more than I would have found with a book.
What about page-turning? It is slower than a book. There is a distinct "one-and-two" count as the page dissolves and re-forms after your thumb has touched the flicker, and it can be disconcerting. I found it more cumbersome than turning a page. Speeding this up will be important if the ebook is to really catch on. There is a scroll-bar on the bottom of the page, and with the stylus you can jump to different parts of the book, but again this is slower than the real thing, and obviously you can't turn over the corners of pages - electronic bookmarks are, we're promised, on the way. Ebooks have many more pages than their paper equivalents (because each page holds so few words), and I found myself wishing for better and more readily searchable indexes and contents. Again, though, this is probably a wrinkle that will be sorted.
For me, the most important moment came reading a Sherlock Holmes story when I suddenly realised I'd been following the tale for several minutes having completely forgotten about the Iliad itself. This, of course, is essential: how many of us could get anything out of a book if we were constantly saying, in a small voice, "Hey, look at me - I'm reading this thing"?
I was surprised by how easy it was to use, and surprised by how much can be stored on it. I liked the rather elegant, retro design, more like a digital slate than a piece of flashy gear - that's good marketing. But the real question is whether it is so useful that it is worth more than 400? And on top of that, there's the material itself, because although a deal with the Amazon subsidiary Mobipocket means there will be access to about 50,000 titles, and though publishers such as Macmillan are now moving into ebooks for new authors, scientific books and other material, the proud owner of an Iliad would still buy "books" to download. It isn't cheap and it isn't going to replace beautifully made books, or books with lots of pictures, or the latest must-be-seen-with novel, or the read-and-chuck airport thriller. It won't destroy bookshops, any more than the much more advanced music-download business has destroyed albums. I won't be thinning out my book collection and digitalising it.
And yet ... I can now see a way in which this, or its future rivals, could become useful to me. In our house, every day we get mounds of newsprint, much of it thrown instantly away. The stuff hangs around like intellectual scurf, and it's depressing. For my broadcasting work, another great wodge of briefings, clippings and so on arrives, most days of the week. They pile up. Just looking at them saps the spirit. Then there are the pamphlets and instant books, the magazines and so on. The waste of time and space, as well as paper and transport, increasingly offends me. The energy cost of downloading such material and looking at it on screen is a small fraction of the energy used in printing it out on paper. Being able to download newspapers each morning, which is likely to be possible soon, or the RSS newsfeeds already available everywhere, would be a major bonus. The same goes for the work briefing. Yes, it's another threat to traditional newspapers, since I would certainly screen out what I don't read (fashion, sport, much of business news) ahead of time. If I can scrawl all over those bits of "paper", making my own notes, better still.
Then there's travelling. Mostly I carry round a bulging bag of books, and on holiday it's bigger still - a great back-straining burden. If I could download a dozen new novels or biographies and carry them in super-compressed form inside my reader, it would make getting about a lot easier. I'd still take paper books with pictures, and paper books I wanted to scribble on and keep for ever, but even there, we are talking about a minority of works.
Overall, I am reluctantly impressed with my ebook. Yet I write this on a busy table crammed with books - mostly for my Radio 4 programme Start the Week, as it happens. There's a brilliant new biography of the young Stalin, John Major on the history of early cricket (fascinating plates in both), Mark Tully's new book on India, and Timothy Phillips's book on the Beslan massacre, which is really a book about Russia and the Caucasus. Over there is a picture book on war graves (very moving), and a book from the 1930s about Walter Raleigh for a radio project. And at any minute, the doorbell will go and the very first bound copy of my own new book, a history of modern Britain, will arrive - I hope. And the truth is that all of these give me pleasure of a kind I won't find on a screen. All my life I've somehow assumed that simply owning books like Tully's, or the Stalin biography, made me a better person. Well, that didn't work, but the instinct remains.
Meanwhile, my advice to the makers is to refine the page-turning just a little more, offer a battered blue cloth-bound wallet and, above all, make it smell - just a little musty, please. Or dank. You could offer a choice. But it's clear enough that after all the waiting and the over-hyping, the ebook is arriving. Before long you are going to see them being carried nonchalantly around. And after that some of you, at least, are going to buy one.
출처 : http://books.guardian.co.uk/ebooks/story/0,,2077277,00.html#article_continue


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