We see the appeal of loading up your library of Tami Hoag novels and trucking them with you all over the map, iPod-style. But the Amazon Kindle can't be the best design ever, right?
Right. Two new e-readers have just popped up on Taiwan-based Netronix's website: the Linux-based 6" EB-100, which looks very Kindleish, and the fairly slick 9.7" EB-300 (pictured) which we're much more excited about. It runs Windows CE 5.0 off 64MB of SDRAM and holds 4GB of NAND storage, with SD card slots to expand. That 1200 x 825 screen goes to 170 dpi and yep... it's touch-enabled, which should make flipping pages super-easy. The software supports TXT, PDF, RTF, HTML, BMP, JPG, GIF, PNG, MP3, and AAC files, and the whole thing comes in at half an inch thick.
The EB-300's WiFi and Bluetooth might not compare to the Kindel's 3G networks support, but the screen resolution and onboard memory - not to mention the black finish - totally outpace Amazon's proprietary e-reader.
Unfortunately, neither of Netronix's new toys (or the Kindel, for that matter) are available at the moment. But when they are, they're all eligible for a SquareTrade warranty, with optional Accidental Damage coverage. Because $400 is too much to waste on a book you can't power up. Particularly if you're just a chapter or two from the end.
Now, when do we get the Text-to-Voice e-readers?
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