Uploader Comments (Diginfonews)
Top Comments
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Magna doodle in technicolor
All Comments (38)
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probably not as robust as "epaper"
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@siciliano29 NO WHINING
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So if you shake it i will lose my text documents?
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lol i had one off these when i was 5
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@siciliano29 Sadly there is no requirement that e-paper be either thin or flexible. The only requirement is that it mimic the appearance of ordinary ink on paper which, shockingly, all of these devices do.
Just because you are ignorant does not give you the right to force said ignorance on everyone else.
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great! Finally a 13 inch "tablet"!
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I hate it when companies show off awesome tech like this and it isn't available for purchase. Its like a kid saying ha ha I got it you don't LOL.
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don't like it , because i cand move like mobile phone everywhere where i go :) this is for home or work desk not hollydays , to say like in this way :)
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don't like it , because i cand move like mobile phone everywhere where i go :) this is for home or work desk not hollydays , to say like in this way :)
Honestly, I HATE it when companies refer to rigid display panels as "e-paper"...they look more like tablets. Don't call it e-paper unless it's paper thin and flexible, like the display at the very end of the video... which, I might add, they took only a measly few seconds to "show off" with absolutely nothing moving on the screen. *sigh*
siciliano29 10 months ago
@siciliano29 Thanks for your comment! The reason we referred to it as an e-paper display is because the 'display' component (the Bridgestone Aerobee e-paper display) is actually "paper thin and flexible" as you can see at 2:12. The functional device, the e-reader, is the display component integrated into a computer. The name tag shown at the end is a display which has been 'printed' on and then disconnected, which is why there is "absolutely nothing moving on the screen".
Diginfonews 10 months ago 9