Hands-on with Asus' Eee Tablet eReader/Writer with Integrated Digicam
by Mathew Miranda
from: http://hothardware.com/


Adding Value To The World, one Post At A Time
by Mathew Miranda
from: http://hothardware.com/
Posted by gjblass at 11:55 AM 0 comments
Labels: Asus, ereader, Tablet, touchscreen, touchscreen pc
By: Christian Simmon & Geoffrey Blass
http://www.apple.com/ipad/
The knew Apple iPad represents an opportunity to revolutionize the education industry. The availability for interactive textbooks has always been dream of mine, and apple's iPad makes it possible.
How much do students spend on course materials each year?
While this information varies based on factors such as course load and subject matter, students
estimated spending an average of $702 on required course materials during the 2006-07
academic year according to NACS’ Student Watch™ 2008 report. Required course materials can
be any type of book or media required or recommended by faculty for classes. These could be
new or used textbooks, regular or general books, even children’s books, as well as
coursepacks/readers/customized materials or digital/electronic educational materials.
Apple iPad costs: Apple has announced the cost on Wednesday that it ranges in between $499 and $830, which is lower than the expected cost. Analysts, expected that it would have cost $800 to $ 1000. So, the brokerage analysts were pleasantly surprised by the announcement. However, the costs depend on the models and their respective memory. Apple iPad with Wi-Fi alone costs $ 499 that comes with 16 GB model and 32GB model costs $ 599 and 64 GB model costs 699 dollars and so on. 3G will cost you $130 more...
This product is perfect for the academic world. Everyone remembers, the old process of buying books for college. You go to the bookstore, you search, then its sold out or worse used and already all marked up.
16GB 32GB 64GB Wi-Fi $499 $599 $699 Wi-Fi + 3G $629 $729 $829
- Prices in U.S. dollars. International pricing will be announced at a later date.
- 3G data plan sold separately.
Posted by seabastian at 10:43 AM 1 comments
Labels: apple, apple iphone, Apple Tablet, Books, Colleges, ereader, University
Make no mistake about it: The original Kindle ebook reader was an amazing device -- the first ereader to engender feelings of love. Tying a lightweight screen to Amazon's book collection with a free 3G wireless connection was genius, and easily earned our Best of What's New kudos.
But the original Kindle was by no means a looker. Its wide, clunky buttons seemed to have been placed at random, with the sole intention of making them easy to press by accident. The four-level grayscale e-ink screen was fine for text but made photos (say, from newspaper articles) look like really cheap Xeroxes from the library copy machine. And navigation was sluggish.
Kindle 2.0, introduced today, is what 1.0 should have been. It's an amazing 0.36 inches thin -- making the 0.48-inch iPhone look chunky. (In fact, 2.0 looks eerily like an oversized original iPhone in its dimensions and two-tone back plate.) Buttons now tilt inward, meaning you're a lot less likely to bump the edge and accidentally advance to the next page. And a new 16-shade grayscale screen renders handsome black and white photos.
It works better as well. Gone is the odd scroll wheel that moved so much faster than the lethargic screen refresh that I typically overshot what I was looking for. In its place is a joystick that lets you zip the cursor around text -- to select words and look up their definitions, for example. It also makes newspapers easier to navigate. While you're reading one article, you see can push the joystick to the left or right to scroll through headlines of other articles and jump to them. Or push down on the joystick to get a list of all the newspaper sections.
Kindle 2.0 also introduces a text-to-speech function that reads aloud anything on the screen. Though it lacks real intonation, the voice does sound much better than the 1950s android-style speech you might expect.
Curiously, the Kindle plays this audio over stereo speakers. Overkill? Or can we be expecting real eBooks and maybe music downloads in the future? And in case your neighbors aren't as fond of robospeech as you are, you can plug in a stereo headphone.
Content offerings include 230,000 books for $9.99 or less (including 103 of the top 110 on the New York Times bestseller list). Among those titles is an exclusive on the new Stephen King novella Ur, perhaps the first literary infomercial. The horror writer showed up at the unveiling announcing "I'm the entertainment portion," and recounted how Amazon asked him about a month ago to write a story specifically for Kindle.
King read aloud a portion of Ur in which the protagonist, a university literature professor, first encounters the Kindle in the hands of a student. He chides the young man for reading from a computer screen, but the student fights back, explaining all the wonderful advantages of this Kindle electronic reader, finally saying "You ought to get one." The entire class cheers when the professor says that he "just might." For anyone who believes in the separation of literature and commerce, Ur certainly will be a horror story.But with 229,999 other books on offer, there should be some enjoyable reading available for most anyone.
Amazon also expanded its selection of newspapers and magazines, including USA Today and The New Yorker, and it has grown the number of blogs that are available for automatic updates, including our pals over at gadget site Gizmodo.
Kindle 2.0 is available for pre-order now at amazon.com/kindle2 for $359 and will start shipping on February 24th. Customers on the waiting list for the long sold-out Kindle 1 will get an automatic upgrade to K2, and current K1 owners move to the front of the line if they order a K2 before midnight Tuesday.
Here are some other key specs:
Size: 5.3 by 8 by 0.36 inches, 10.2 ounces
Screen: 6-inch electrophoeretic screen at 600 by 800 pixels, 16-level grayscale
Storage: 2.5GB internal storage with space for about 1500 books
Battery life: two weeks
Wireless: 3G EVDO cellular data connection (from Sprint) for 60-second book downloads
Connection: USB 2.0 for loading audio files
Audio: stereo speakers plus standard 3.5-mm headphone jack
Built-in dictionary: 250,000-entry
Blogs available: 1,200
Posted by Chismillionaire at 9:35 AM 0 comments
Labels: amazon, bezos, ebook, eink, ereader, Gear and Gadgets, kindle, kindle 2.0, Sean Captain, Stephen King