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Posted: 26 Oct 2015, 13:05
by elecplus
Posted: 29 Oct 2015, 05:18
by Ace
Great! But the second lik you shared seems to be the same exact model.
Posted: 29 Oct 2015, 05:19
by elecplus
Ace wrote: Great! But the second link you shared seems to be the same exact model.
Scroll down to see the newer replacements.
Posted: 30 Oct 2015, 16:01
by davkol
derp
Posted: 07 Nov 2015, 00:42
by infodroid
I've been doing some more e-reader research. Some new findings.
Onyx are planning to release a 13" e-ink device next year with a "flexible PVI HD screen" with 2200x1650 resolution:
http://the-digital-reader.com/2015/11/0 ... on-screen/
Noteslate are taking pre-orders their new 6.8" Noteslate SHIRO:
http://liliputing.com/2015/10/noteslate ... -2016.html
They also have a teaser for a 13.3" model dubbed the Noteslate HERO:
http://the-digital-reader.com/2015/11/0 ... ate-video/
There is also a prototype 13.3" device from Netronix at 1200x1600:
http://the-digital-reader.com/2015/11/0 ... ate-video/
Posted: 05 Dec 2015, 23:01
by Ace
I saw Onyx's model, but didn't no that Noteslate was doing it too. I hope these projects aren't canceled…
Posted: 05 Dec 2015, 23:40
by HuBandiT
Ectaco JetBook.
there's also an 1200x1600 13.3" offering from Sony for $800 USD:
http://pro.sony.com/bbsc/ssr/show-digit ... gitalpaper
Posted: 06 Dec 2015, 10:01
by Muirium
Old thread I see. Before the iPad Pro.
Posted: 26 Jun 2016, 20:43
by jrouquie
Current market status for ≥13in e-readers :
- Sony DPTS1.
- Onyx boox max. Vs its competitor: cheaper, heavier (500 vs 360g), open to Android Playstore, stylus only (finger doesn't work), has bluetooth and audio, a dozen format beyond PDF (epub, jpg, djvu...).
- Noteslate HERO doesn't appear on noteslate.com
iPads just don't use e-ink.
Posted: 27 Jun 2016, 11:18
by zuglufttier
I'd try the Onyx... Android will allow you to display pretty much every file available. But are they readily available?
Posted: 27 Jun 2016, 11:40
by Halvar
Bummer that they're still so expensive.
Posted: 27 Jun 2016, 14:33
by zuglufttier
The problem is that most consumers have no need for large e-readers. There just no demand. That demand comes from the industry or maybe people with some academic background or persons who read a lot of scientific papers in general.
I also don't have a use for a big reader but a few years back, it would have been really helpful while studying... I had a Sony PRS-T1 back then and that was not of great use just because the screen was too small. Everything else was fine with it.