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Onyx Boox Nova Air C: Yearly E-Ink Tablet Upgrade Review!

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Holy cow they finally did it! Finally a decent COLOUR E-Ink tablet. And it only took… well…. too many decades. I’ve been waiting for this my whole life!

When Sony released their first English language E-Ink ebook reader [PRS-500] in 2006, it turned my life upside down. I had been badly in need of a device like that. Since childhood I’ve always been an avid reader [to put it quite lightly] and paper books were always a massive hassle. The weight of carrying a number of them around, the space needed to keep them “all”, and then of course there was the matter of moving from country to country which unfortunately resulted in leaving many beloved books behind. I had already switched to ebooks out of necessity, but it wasn’t working very well. I had no intention of destroying my eyes by staring at a screen for hours, so let’s just say that I was wasting massive amounts of printer paper. And literally daydreaming about an E-Ink reader.

Of course the technology already existed and a few companies, including Sony, had already released such devices in the Asian market, since at least a couple of years earlier. But for whatever reason, the benefits and general point of E-Ink devices have always apparently been clearer to people in that part of the world and so, the English speaking market has always been quite inconveniently lagging behind.

I was fascinated by the technology and the difference it would make for people like me. And so I really really [and I mean reeeeeeeeally] wanted an eReder. When PRS-500 finally got released in the US, some 10 minutes later I had one. And oh my god I loved it! The simple functionality of that ebook reader really made my life so much easier. Being able to carry around a library in my pocket, and reading for hours without worrying about destroying my eyes, it was fantastic! No more leaving books behind, and hey, killing far less trees!

I was a huge fan of Sony’s line of ebook readers and E-Ink technology in general [enough that I even got involved in the development for a short time]. Each Sony eReader that came out could do more and better than the previous. They really were putting a lot of effort into it. Around 2008, when papers and articles related to colour E-Ink tech started showing up on the web, I was pretty sure Sony was going to release a colour ereader soon enough, putting an end to the final shortcoming of these devices. Unfortunately that never happened.

Instead to my disbelief and disappointment, in 2013 Sony put an end to their eReader line. Simple fact was that E-Ink devices never gained a lot of popularity in the western market. I can’t tell you the number of times [both in North America and Europe, though interestingly never in the Middle East] I had people ask me why the heck I was reading on this strange monochrome device, instead of all the colourful tablets out there. It was frustrating to watch, but the coin never seemed to quite drop for the general population in certain parts of the world. And Sony didn’t see a point in continuing the development of such devices when they only appealed to a bunch of nerds like me.

Of course the mess made by companies like Amazon and devices like Kindle Fire didn’t help matters at all. Amazon and a couple of other companies calling their very much normal blue light emitting LCD tablets “ebook readers” created even more of a confusion and less interest in the E-Ink technology by completely disregarding the reasons E-Ink devices were created in the first place. Yup, I’m talking about the generally overlooked matter of one’s ocular health, the “small” matter of staring at a type of screen that as it happens DOESN’T destroy one’s eyes.

So the following so many years were frustrating. Colour E-Ink devices became less and less of a discussion, and while there was and even the monochrome ebook readers available were devolving and generally of terrible quality. I tried a variety and it was just sad. The last one in the long line of useless devices I tried was the Kobo Aura H2O [2nd edition] which was supposed to be oh so wonderful, and turned out to be the kind of pain that nearly brought me to tears. I went from Sony devices that could deal wonderfully with various formats including PDFs, had great note taking, audio and….. functionalities to a piece of $£I@ that needed to be rooted and modified in a million different ways to do anything at all.

However meanwhile in Asia, the interest in the technology kept growing, the E-Ink foundation continued R&D and eventually in 2018 E-Ink Kaleido was announced. After that it took a rather short time for colour ebook readers / tablets to start popping up in the Asian market. The first several attempts were not great, but eventually as of last year some decent-ish readers started making appearances in Asian electronics shows.

I kept watching the development of E-Ink devices on the other side of the pond and wondering if the only solution would be to eventually find a way to get my hands on Chinese E-Ink tablets and “somehow” find my way around the language issues. So you can say I was quite excited when suddenly I started seeing a couple of brand names, that previously I only read about on websites like goodereader.com, started making appearances on the websites of a few Swiss retailers. At the time I was near tears with the Kobo and I decided to give the Onyx Boox Nova Pro a try.

Well, I have to say that the Nova Pro was already pretty much years ahead of anything produced by the English speaking market. A true E-Ink tablet with great capabilities such as note taking, audio, Bluetooth and WiFi, and just about anything else a decent Android tablet would have. While it was clear that some things were still under development [using the device with wired headphones needed some tweaking and that kind of thing…], I was very very happy with the device. And so, as more and more colour E-Ink devices became available in Asia, I knew it was only a matter of time until Onyx went for it too.

And yes, they did. Oh they so did. Onyx Boox Nova 3 Colour was released in March, and in April I got my hands on it, WOOHOOOWW! As you can imagine my expectations were ridiculously high, and I’m happy to say the Nova 3 Colour has managed to reach all of them! The device is a dream come true.

To start with, the colours have a much better quality than I was expecting. They are sharp and vivid [as you can see in the picture], and ghosting is really minimal. Especially in A2 screen mode, which was pretty much designed for reading comics et al, there’s next to no ghosting. The hardware specs have had quite the upgrade [even since the Nova Pro, you can see the full specs here] and running Android 10, so at this point it’s possible to use just about any Android apps on the device. And yes, it’s actually possible to watch videos on the device which blows my mind completely. The audio quality is amazing, and the device even comes with a voice recorder. Note taking is quite smooth and the included pen has also had a design upgrade.

The device is something I have quite literally been waiting for my whole life, and I couldn’t be happier with it. Now I just wait for Onyx to release a colour version of the Max Lumi [or hopefully something even larger?!] so that I can finally have E-Ink displays for my PCs!

You Had One Job by Scott Brown

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“You Had One Job” => Go here to listen to the podcast.

Recently a friend shared this podcast with me. The 3rd act is the reading of a story titled “You had one job”, by “Scott Brown”. The story is being told by a police bomb disposal robot named Miles, who ends up being ordered to blow up a criminal. It’s a brilliant, thought provoking, sad, cute, melancholic story and definitely worth listening to.
This has been inspired by real life events that took place some months ago in Dallas, where an “Remotec Andros Mark V-A1 [5-A1]” was apparently for the first time used to do away with a shooter that had killed several cops.

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Radical Abundance by K. Eric Drexler

A friend of mine just asked me if I finally read Drexler’s “Radical Abundance“, which reminded me that I didn’t write anything about it… or anything else I’ve been reading recently. =P Yes, I read it, and I re-read it, and finished doing so a while back. And I’m a big fan!

K. Eric Drexler, who is for all intents and purposes the father of nanotechnology, is probably the most qualified person to explain what we’ve already accomplished in the field, what’s to be expected, the obstacles, the misunderstandings, and why we’re not where we could be yet. In this book he also does an amazing job in describing in a very straightforward and “none-fiction” way, what the future could look like if we did in fact realize the potentials of the field.

I’ll probably read this again soon enough… huuuuuuge fan!

Radical Abundance

Oh VAIO, My VAIO…..

Last month I started having some really sneaky hardware issues on my main machine, which kept escalating and eventually I ended up consulting a friend of mine who, let’s just say,  has a thing or two to do with the VAIO line.

Aside from discussing solutions to the peculiar problems at hand, naturally it also occurred to me that I may have to replace my main machine in some not too far away point in the future. So I asked him what would VAIO have for me. And then he did a double take, stammered a bit, and said something like “uhmm, well, uhh, I thought you knew… VAIO isn’t there anymore, at least not the VAIO we knew”. To which I nearly yelled back “well I guess I don’t receive the internal memos anymore”.

Argh. Thought it was a bad joke. Turned out it wasn’t.

What the hell? Well, it turns out Sony has officially had it with the PC business, and has sold the VAIO line to a Japanese firm that is now developing it into a standalone brand. They’re going to continue producing VAIO PCs, but well obviously they’ll have nothing to do with Sony anymore and at least for the moment they’ll also not be available anywhere outside of Japan. Well, *sigh*.

So that was that, and since then I’ve been looking into what I might what I might want to get next. This has also been the topic of discussion with friends and colleagues, and well, it looks like the absence of VAIO is leaving a real hole in the notebook market. Simply put, there’s nothing out there with even so much as comparable quality. And that is the state I am in right now, no idea what to get next. I need something powerful, slim, with high quality long lasting hardware. Suggestions?

P.S.: Is it really ridiculous that I feel horrible that I can’t get VAIOs anymore? =( I basically never had a notebook that wasn’t VAIO!

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Out with the Facebook apps!

So that’s it, I’ve just removed both the Facebook app and the messenger from my Android tablet. Goodbye and good riddance.

I’ve simply had it with the nonsense. The main FB app is a terrible battery sucker. I have plenty of memory on my device which is why I hadn’t paid attention, but it also uses uplogo-dislike-facebook-psd81960[1] faaaar too much memory. Then as of the recent versions you don’t really have much of a control on what you’re being fed. The feed is automatically set to show you what FB believes is most important, and you have no way of changing that. If you simply want to see the recent posts you have to specifically select a feed from the menu screen. And the list goes on.

Now of course to make things even better, FB recently decided that it wasn’t enough that we have to deal with one power sucker, so instead they decided to force the users to install yet another one, in order to send and receive messages. This new app is simply useless. Half the time it doesn’t give me any notification for received messages, and when it does, it’s likely it won’t actually show the new message [it doesn’t update]. And it never shows if my message has been seen.

So at any rate, today I finally got fed-up enough to remove both from my Android device. Trillian will kindly inform me of new messages, and for everything else I’ll simply use my browser. Of course for me it’s more complicated than most, seeing that I don’t use a cellphone and Facebook / email and few other things are my way of staying in touch with the world. So let’s see how long I’ll last.

In September 2006, SONY released their very first line of ebook readers, PRS-500. By October 2006, I had already got my hands on one, despite the fact that the product was at the time only available in USA [and I was living in Canada]. A few months earlier I had already come across the leaked specs for the device, and I knew I was looking at the realized version of something the need for which had been running around in my head pretty much since I started reading.

Hand held devices and tablet computers on which I could read eBooks weren’t anything new, but this was something entirely different. Aside from the nice proper size, ease of use, and well, being able to carry around a whole library in my back pocket, on this device I could read for hours without tiring my eyes due to the E-Ink tech. Having come to the conclusion that in a life like mine I simply couldn’t buy and carry around paperbacks, I moved to the ebook side long before that. But this was the first time I was well and truly freed of paper.

I can’t begin to describe how much I enjoyed my first reader, and since then I have kept a very close eye on the development of ebook readers from different brand. I guess that part is obvious, given the number of posts on this blog on the topic. Another thing that’s obvious from the posts on this blog, is that I’ve not up to this day found a reader that I’ve liked more than the Sony Reader line. [And yes well… for a time I was involved with the development… ]

I imagine by now I’ve made it pretty clear about the kind of dislike I have for Amazon Kindle, and the reasons. And I don’t have much positive things to say [comparatively] about the other popular products out there either. But then it’s not as if I’ve always liked how the Sony Reader has turned out.

Since PRS-500, I’ve basically tried every single Reader model that Sony has released [yes and I still have all of them =D], and not all of them have been so great. I loved PRS-500 since it was my first one. =) PRS-505 was very functional and very cool. PRS-700 was pretty much the love of my life. It was just beautiful, very smooth in every way, amazing performance, and it had back light. And then came PRS-T3. And every model that I haven’t mentioned, it’s because in some way or the other I didn’t really like it.

But oh my world, PRS-T3! This is quite easily the best Sony Reader up to now, and in my opinion very much the best ebook reader currently available. And well, remember how I recently mentioned something about amazing Sony products somehow being constantly dissed by online reviews? That applies to this product too. I can’t for the life of me figure out how it is that readers with terrible hardware, glitchie software and all sorts of limitations  are gaining name, while the Sony reader isn’t even on the charts!! [Probably a question for marketing people.] I can’t quite understand exactly how Kindle still exists, how it’s still being produced and bought, when a piece of art like PRS-T3 exists.

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The device, which runs a mini version of Android OS, simply functions very very smoothly. It supports a wide range of ebook and image formats, including ones that Kindle and the rest of them don’t support, and you have no limitations as to where you get the books from. The note taking functionality works very well both with finger and a stylus. It’s naturally WiFi connected and there are no browsing limitations [you can go wherever you like via the browser]. The device has an optional “light cover”, where a very nicely designed reading light extends from the back of the cover. [And unlike the previous version, it doesn’t require a separate battery. It uses a negligible amount of the reader’s own charge.]

But I guess the most important feature of all is nothing new, the E-Ink is still there, and smoother than ever. The device’s display is brilliant, and you can stare at it for hours without any pressure on your eyes, or at least no more than staring at paper [hint hint to Kindle Fire users].

Oh, and to explain the part about “stolen and repurchased”. Well, originally I bought the T3 about 4 months ago. But less than a month after that I was robbed in the train, and the reader was stolen from me. So I had to repurchase it… well it was rather annoying seeing that for various reasons I purchased this one from Canada and I had to have my mom buy it again over there and send it to me… But yes, the new one’s been here a few weeks now and all is back to normal.

Yesterday evening at the Transmedia Zurich event, we were introduced to 2 very interesting new location based games: “Rundercover” and “Gbanga Famiglia Rise and Fall”. Even as the so called “cell-phone boycotter”, I found both pretty cool / creative. I think this genre of game generally appeals to my need for being physically active while playing… The games are both being developed here in Switzerland, and they both have crowd funding campaigns that you can check out and then hopefully support. Here:

Rundercover website / Kickstarter

Gbanga Famiglia Rise and Fall on Indiegogo

P.S.: The mandetory back-side shot courtesy of these guys.

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Haskell Glasgow Compiler 7.8

Last Thursday evening I attended a very interesting presentation on the pretty cool new Haskell3D[1] features of the upcoming GHC 7.8. Though I’ve personally not yet had the chance to play with the new release, I’m very excited about it, since apparently many of the features that were discussed for a long while are now finally included. As it was mentioned in the meeting, it’s not that it’s not a mess anymore, it’s just that it’s much less of a mess. 😉

Here you can find a PDF copy of the presentation slides [sans code]. [The talk was hosted by the Zurich HaskellerZ group.]

3D Hubs Zurich

Recently I attended the launch event for “3D Hubs” in Zurich. I really didn’t know anything about the service before that event, but I had in fact been wondering if such service exists. There are people with 3D printers, there are people who need something printed, it would be great if something connects them all to each other. And “3D Hubs” does exactly that. Check it out!

Also, there were some rather amazing printed items to see at the event. Here’s some examples:

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This glove was entirely 3D printed, all the links together!

DSC04266[1]The brown one was printed out of PLA filament containing wood dust. It actually smells and feels like wood!

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Transparent PLA!

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Pretty stuff! =P

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Inside looks a lot like a real analogue camera!

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Hey, I'm Aasemoon, and this is my blog which has been around since 1998. Childhood toy project that ended up growing up with me. You can reach me here: aasemoon.blue

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