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The Electronic Book. E-Books… A presentation by Max Pearce Director Technology Assessment. What is an E-Book?. A portable device that can display text and images stored in internal memory, thereby mimicking the conventional book.
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The Electronic Book... E-Books… A presentation by Max Pearce Director Technology Assessment
What is an E-Book? • A portable device that can display text and images stored in internal memory, thereby mimicking the conventional book. • E-Books potentially offer the user additional features not possible with the conventional printed page, including note-taking and dictionary capabilities. • Can you think of others?
Similar Technologies... • Notebook and palm-top computers incorporate the types of technology necessary to build E-Books. • Devices like the Casio Cassiopeia and 3-Com Palm Pilot PDAs have essentially identical architectures to the E-Book products currently on offer.
The PDA... • One E-Book manufacturer claims that it is possible to use a Palm Pilot or Windows CE PDA to read electronic titles. • Presumable this would require special applications software within the PDA. • Most PDA’s have small screens and are probably not an ideal E-Book platform.
The Cassiopeia... The Casio Cassiopeia is a Windows CE based personal digital assistant device with 8 Mbytes of memory. It retails in Australia for around $750.
E-Book Technology Enablers... • Display technology • Packaging technology • Battery Technology • Integrated Circuit Technology • The Internet • Technological Convergence
E-Book Architecture... • Display Unit • Navigation Controls • Communications Interface • Microprocessor controller and OS • Memory • Power supply
‘Currently’ available hardware... 4 1. RocketeBook 2. EB: Dedicated Reader 3. SoftBook 4. Millennium E-Reader
RocketeBook... • Manufacturer: NuvoMedia • Price: About US$500 • Capacity: 4000 pages • Weight: 570 gm • Dimensions: 19 (h) x 12.5 (w) x 3.5 (d) cm • Screen: 14 cm diagonal • Battery life: 17 hr back-light, 33 hr without
SoftBook... • Manufacturer: SoftBook Press • Price: US$299 + $19.95/mth minimum purchase • Capacity: up to 100,000 pages text & gray-scale • Weight: 1.3 kg • Dimensions: 28 (h) x 21.6 (w) x 2.5 (d) cm • Screen: 24 cm diagonal • Battery Life: Six hours.
The SoftBook… • The SoftBook does not require a computer to download titles. • The SoftBook incorporates a dial-up modem and internal software to allow the download of the selected title(s). • If a title is deleted from the SoftBook it can be retrieved at no charge.
EB: Dedicated Reader... • Manufacturer: Everybook • Price: US$1400 to US$1600 • Capacity: 500,000 colour pages • Weight: 1.68 kg • Dimensions: 30 (h) x 24 (w) x 4.6 (d) cm • Screen: Two screens, 33.8 cm diagonal • Battery life: Four to six hours
Millennium E-Reader... • Manufacturer: Librius • Price: US$199 • Capacity: 8000 pages • Weight: 0.34 kg • Dimensions: unknown • Screen: 480 x 320 pixels • Battery Life: 22 hours
Millennium E-Reader... The Millennium E-Reader is expected in US Summer 1999. Librius indicate that the electronic titles can be read on Palm Pilot or Windows CE devices. An E-Reader is therefore not necessary if you own an existing palm computer device.
The printed page... • A typical page of text from a printed book is both high resolution and very high contrast. • White paper and black ink are difficult to duplicate with conventional display technologies. • Printing costs are very low, typically less than a couple of dollars for a paperback.
The electronic future... • The world-wide book market has been reported at some US$72 billion/year. • Publishers are naturally cautious, however it is assumed that they appreciate the potential implications of technological convergence and the printed page. • A high-performance, low-cost E-book would be an interesting development.
E-Book Building Blocks... • The technology necessary to build E-Books is available now. Microprocessors, memory and related components are here today. • Unfortunately, there is no currently available display technology that can offer high contrast, high resolution, low cost, low power consumption and able to operate in a hostile environment.
Display Technology… • E-books currently offer Liquid Crystal Display panels; some are touch sensitive. • LCDs require back-lights for use in dull lighting conditions, have limited viewing angles, suffer from low contrast, can exhibit slow response in cold conditions are mechanically fragile and consume considerable power.
LCDs... • High performance LCD display panels have been developed and are now used in laptop and personal computers. • These new displays still however suffer from viewing angle restrictions, excessive power consumption, limited contrast range in daylight and mechanical fragility.
New display technologies... • While thin film transistor (TFT) LCD devices are currently the display of choice for laptop PC applications, alternative technologies are under development. • Two new developments are: Field Emission Displays (FEDs) Light Emitting Polymer displays (LEPs)
FEDs... • FEDs should compete with existing LCD panels and may allow the development of flat-panel home cinema - perhaps one day. • Their power consumption is claimed to be about 50% of a comparable LCD panel. • FEDs are still fabricated using glass and are have similar fragility properties to LCDs.
FED Display View Angle... LCD FED
Light Emitting Polymers... • Cambridge Display Technology (CDT) have developed the concept of the Light Emitting Polymer. • LEP is a substance that can be deposited onto a substrate and made to emit light when connected to a source of electric current.
LEPs... • The chemical is known as: Poly(p-xylene-alpha-tetrahydrothiophenium bromide) • LEPs can be fabricated on flexible substrates, thereby increasing display ruggedness.
LEPs potentially offer... • A low-cost high-performance display solution for a variety of applications including electronic books. • CDT and Seiko-Epson are currently collaborating to develop the “Plastic Television” - a full colour LEP video display. • Prototype was due in late 1998!
A LEP E-Book... • LEP display technology is probably fundamental to the development of low cost E-Books. • Once the manufacturing is mastered it is expected that rugged low cost, low power, high contrast, wide viewing angle displays will be readily available. • But don’t hold your breath!
In summary... • Practical E-Books depend on the availability of better display technology like Light Emitting Polymers. • Despite the current technological limitations, E-Books are seeing the light of day. • The RocketeBook is a good example.
RocketeBook... • The RocketeBook is produced by NuvoMedia and is assembled in Taiwan • Barnes & Noble provides the book titles via their Internet Web site • You need a PC with Win95/98 and an Internet connection with a spare serial port for connection to the RocketeBook
RocketeBook security... • Each RocketeBook must be registered with NuvoMedia via the web. • The Registration process loads a secure Rocket Certificate (A Rocket Key and Rocket ID) into the RocketeBook. • When you order an electronic title, the book file is encrypted for use with your RocketeBook only.
RocketeBook... • E-Book titles are available at the Barnes and Noble Web site [www.barnesandnoble.com] • An account is established using a suitable Credit Card (MC, Visa or Amex). • An e-commerce system allows the user to select and buy RocketEditions. • An e-mail is sent to the buyer with Web details to allow downloading of selected titles.
RocketeBook Memory... • Total memory 4096 kbytes • Operating System 664 kbytes • User memory 3432 kbytes • Necromancer text is about 200 k characters. • Necromancer E-Book files is 166 kbytes • Memory would hold about 20 similar titles
RocketeBook title costs... • Necromancer [Gordon R. Dickson] ISBN 0-812-54530-3 US$5.99 paperback • Necromancer E-Book US$4.95. • Other titles checked indicate a similar discount of about 10 - 15% for the E-Book title over the paper product.
Some RocketeBook features... • Touch screen control • Four-way display • Last page memory • Hyperlinks (selected titles) • Page navigation bar • Bookmarking • Shortcuts • IR communications port • Large/Small fonts • Note annotation • Text search/Dictionary
E-Book WWW addresses... • www.softbook.com [SoftBook] • www.nuvomedia.com [RocketeBook] • www.everybk.com [EB: Dedicated Reader] • www.librius.com [Millennium E-Reader]
Any Questions... ???????????????????????????
E-Books... The End