Alexander Turcic sat down with a Sony product manager with a boatload of questions courtesy of the forumites over at Mobileread. Still wondering about the Sony Reader? This Q&A will likely answer all of your questions. Everything from file formats, PDF info, CONNECT service, power, operating system, audio, RSS and DRM are covered.
There is some unfortunate news that was learned from this Q&A: the Sony Reader will only be available in the U.S., and no, there still isn't a release date. Hit the link to learn everything and more about this highly anticipated device.
Sony Reader questions answered by Sony Reader Team [Mobileread]












Comments
Sony may have just delayed this one too many times for me. I was really wanting to get one of these badly, but the delays are killing me. The other option right now is priced too high, so this may be another opportunity missed.
I think this one will flop like a badly baked cake. It's expensive, looks fragile, and has no paper. There's a certain comfort in reading a book, the smell of the ink and pages, turning pages and watching yourself progress, etc. Also, you can stuff a small paperback in the botton of your bag or in your back pocket and not worry about it cracking in half. When they come out with E-book readers that roll up like a scroll (using flexible e-ink screens, of course) I might consider buying one.
If this is truly a highly-anticipated device, Sony would come out with it. I'd guess that a combination of the device's limitations and high price are major contributors to the continual delays...
Why does it have a huge thick case border, and then an additional margin on the text on the screen? Very inefficient as a reader, the text column is only just over half as wide as the reader itself. Stick with a better designed PDA.
Blitzcat, I believe the margin on the display is just the margin in the particular document displayed in the photograph. The unit does have a large case but this is the first E-ink consumer product that's "real" so I'm not surprised its bulky.
And it's not a PDA. The idea is to just read books. Nothing else. This has a lot of use for someone who needs to carry around lots of manuals, technical references, contracts and other mish-mash.
I suspect it won't completely flop but probably won't be a big hit. The display technology is the neatest part.
I'd love to have one of these for the equipment manuals I have to refer to constantly at work (and some leisure reading in my spare time.)
Although the eReader could be great for carrying around a bunch of manuals, the manuals are likely to be in PDF format, which woukld likely require a decent zoom and pan capability to make technical documents usable. Unfortunately, those capabilities are limited.
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