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The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
byoever ( 233119 ) writes:
e-paper is nice way of reading. The only reason why i do not own an e-reader is that the time to go from page to page is too long. With these improved speeds (12 fps or 80ms) this last drawback is being solved. That is very good news. Playing video well on these screens will take longer, but already the speed improvement will really help selling e-readers.
byGinger Unicorn ( 952287 ) writes:
the time to go from page to page is too long
What are you, johnny five? :p
byTheRaven64 ( 641858 ) writes:
He's right. It doesn't take much longer to turn a page with an eInk device than a real book, but it feels a lot longer. When you turn a page in a book, you're turning a page. When you turn a page with an eInk device, you're waiting for the page to turn. I saw one UI that worked around this by turning the top and bottom halves of the page independently - when you get past the top half, you flip the page turner and it's replaced by the top half of the next page, when you get to the bottom, the next bit is
byJimWise ( 1804930 ) writes:
(I know hardly anyone will read this at this point, but we've been without power here for a few days so trying to catch up.)
My favorite type of e-reading software uses the "ReadThemAll" scrolling method, which would work extremely well with e-ink devices. Instead of scrolling or flipping pages, it replaces the text line by line, and allows you to dynamically adjust the auto-scrolling speed. It places a marker on the far right of the page for about where you should be reading to keep pace, and a dotted line showing where the current break is between the next and current pages is located. When reading at a constant rate, you can read for extended periods without having to touch a thing and with no flickers or jumps of changing text.
Here is an animated gif [maxerist.net] showing how it works (at a VERY slow auto-scroll rate.) The gif is from old PalmOS, which I think was the first system that had a program to use it. The developer has has also made an e-book reader program using ReadThemAll for Windows [maxerist.net].
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