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How to Fix Your 2017 Amazon Fire Tablet When It Stops Showing Google Play Apps

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How to Fix Your 2017 Amazon Fire Tablet When It Stops Showing Google Play Apps e-Reading Hardware Fire Tips and Tricks

the Fire HD 10

A new bug has shown up on late model Fire tablets this week, but luckily a solution was discovered shortly afterward.

A number of users have reported that they were having trouble using some of the apps on their Fire tablet. Some users had installed the apps from Google Play, while others reported having the same problems with apps downloaded from the Amazon Appstore.

 

The users are reporting that the apps are still shown on the home screen, only  grayed out, and when they try to launch the apps they were instead shown an error message suggesting the apps had been installed on an SD card that’s been removed.

I haven't seen this issue myself, but it has been reported on Amazon's Forums, and forum member Ms_Carla has already found a way to resolve the issue.

  1. Open the Amazon Fire tablet’s setting menu.
  2. Choose the Appls & Games option.
  3. Tap Manage All Applications.
  4. Scroll to Appstore, and click it.
  5. Click on Force Stop, and then click OK to confirm.
  6. Then clear the cache, and reboot your tablet.

 

If this doesn't work, Liliputing posted an alternate set of instructions that involve forcing the Fire tablet to reload the home page.

  1. Open the Amazon Fire tablet’s setting menu.
  2. Choose the Appls & Games option.
  3. Tap Manage All Applications.
  4. Swipe to the Running tab.
  5. Tap the three dots in the upper right corner and tap the show cached process option.
  6. Select the option that says Home Pages.
  7. Tap the stop  option.

Amazon has issued a number of minor updates over the past few weeks, one of which probably introduced this bug. I now my older Fire tablet has gotten at least two updates in the past month, but I have not seen this bug.

Have you?

Liliputing


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Onyx Boox Note 10.3″ eReader Goes Up for Pre-Order – Android 6.0, $551

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Onyx's long-awaited 10.3" ereader is almost here, and my god it is expensive.

The Onyx Boox Note features a 10.3" screen with the same resolution as the Remarkable writing tablet, combined with dual touchscreen technologies and princely price tag of 462 euros, or $551 USD.

Onyx Boox Note 10.3" eReader Goes Up for Pre-Order - Android 6.0, $551 e-Reading Hardware Onyx Boox Note 10.3" eReader Goes Up for Pre-Order - Android 6.0, $551 e-Reading Hardware Onyx Boox Note 10.3" eReader Goes Up for Pre-Order - Android 6.0, $551 e-Reading Hardware Onyx Boox Note 10.3" eReader Goes Up for Pre-Order - Android 6.0, $551 e-Reading Hardware

The Onyx Boox Note runs Android 6.0 on a quad-core 1.6Ghz CPU with 2GB RAM, and 32GB storage. In terms of input it has a single button on the front as well as both a capacitive and WACOM touchscreen integrated into its 10.3" Mobius Carta E-ink screen (screen resolution 1872 x 1404).

Powered by a 4.1Ah battery, the Note has Wifi, Bluetooth, a pair of speakers, and a microphone.

That is a powerful device, but it is also an incredibly expensive one. You could buy an iPad for less, and get a tablet that does a lot more.

The Note goes up for pre-order today for 462 euros, and is expected to ship on 7 February.

eReader.Store (formerly ereader-store.de)


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Hands On With the Onyx Boox Max 2 Pro and Boox Note – Coming Soon to Amazon! (video)

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Yesterday I brought you the scoop that the Boox Note will ship early next month from Onyx's , and now it seems we will soon be able to order it fromthe official Onyx stores on Amazon as well.

Liliputing and ArmDevices.net have posted hands on videos for the Onyx Boox Note and the Boox Max 2 Pro, and in both videos the Onyx reps promised that Onyx would sell the ereaders through Amazon.

It is unclear whether that is true, but one can hope.

The Onyx Boox Max 2 Pro and Boox Note are 13.3" and 10.3" versions of basically the same ereader. They both run Android 6.0 on a quad-core 1.6GHz CPU with 2GB RAM and they both have dual-touchscreen technologies. You can draw on their screen with a fingertip (capacitive) or use the pressure-sensitive Wacom stylus with its 2048 degrees of sensitivity.

Besides the screen size, the one key difference are the ports. The Note has a USB-C port (ugh) while the Max 2 Pro has a regular USB port. Both devices have Wifi, BT, speakers, and a mike.

Edit: And both the Max 2, as well as the Note "Pro", have HDMI ports. The Onyx Boox Note mentioned below does not.

The Note is up for pre-order now for 462 euros, and is scheduled to ship in early February. The Max 2 Pro is back-ordered, and should ship later this month.  It costs 671 euros.

We do not know when the Note Pro will be released.


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Edmonton Airport Wastes Money on a Short Story Printer

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Edmonton Airport Wastes Money on a Short Story Printer DeBunking e-Reading Hardware

So the latest hot and trendy bookish gimmick is a receipt printer that has been gussied up as a "vending machine" that prints short stories. This fad is the work of a French startup called First Editions, which has been selling these machines since 2011.

Now Quill and Quire  reports that one of these machines was installed at Edmonton International Airport in Canada.

Waiting in line at the Edmonton International Airport just got a bit less boring thanks to the recent addition of a short story vending machine. With the punch of a button on the Short Story Dispenser, weary travellers can select a free one-, three-, or five-minute read by a local author, which is printed on a “papyrus” – a small scroll of paper much like the receipt you get from an ATM.

The machine is the creation of French startup Short Edition, which has placed 150 Short Story Dispensers in cafés, schools, and public venues since the company’s founding in 2011. The Edmonton machine is only the second in an airport, however, with the first being at Lyon–Saint-Exupéry Airport in France.

I was underwhelmed when these printers were first announced because they are, well, just receipt printers.

This would be an interesting project for a hacker working out of their basement and showing off the device on Hackaday. I mean, you can buy one of these printers online, have a case designed to cover it, and then get a college student to bang together code to print stories. It's really not that difficult.

But as a commercial product from a startup, this device is about as interesting and innovative as the startup that charged you $27 to mail you $20 in quarters.

Why does everyone find this so exciting?


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Remarkable Writing Tablet Gets Its First Firmware Update

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The Remarkable  writing tablet got its first update yesterday. The update will affect both the device itself as well as the companion apps on mobile and desktop, and will be rolled out over the next ten days.

According to the changelog, the update adds a new sleep mode as well as support for more types of Wifi connections. The export process was also tweaked, and so has the crop function.

You can find out more in Remarkable's blog post.

I have had one for about a week (I'm still on the previous firmware). It is very pretty but the the software is lacking. For example, the Remarkable can't keep up with me when I am writing. It's not just that the display lags by a couple characters, but also that it loses strokes.  (Then again, this is an intermittent issue so it could just be user error - maybe I am holding the stylus wrong.)

Do you have one? What do you think of it?


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Bookeen Partner Carre-Four Shut Down its eBook Division, Nolim

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Bookeen Partner Carre-Four Shut Down its eBook Division, Nolim e-Reading Hardware

image by Actualitte

The French retailer CarreFour is getting out of the ebook business.

Actualitte reports that CarreFour has fired 2,400 as part of a company-wide restructuring. It has decided to end a number of projects, including the ebook service it had started in 2013 as well as its ebookstore, the Nolim Store, and a video on demand service launched around the same time.

Carrefour has launched several ereaders under the Nolim brand, including a 6" model released last May. There's no information on the number of units sold.

The ereader market in France is largely dominated by Amazon and Kobo, with smaller ereader makers such as Onyx and Pocketbook trailing.

There's no recent stats on ebook sales in France, but the top 3 ebook retailers are probably Amazon, Apple, and Kobo (through its partnership with Fnac).


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PocketBook 740 Features a 7.8″ Screen, Dual-Core CPU

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PocketBook 740 Features a 7.8" Screen, Dual-Core CPU e-Reading Hardware Amazon lead the market in powerful plus-sized ereaders with the new Kindle Oasis, and now Pocketbook is following suit.

On Tuesday this Ukrainian ereader maker launched the PocketBook 740, a 7.8" ereader that features a new cloud service called PocketBook Cloud for synchronizing books and settings between the 740 and PocketBook's smartphone apps.

This ereader also has an unnamed dual-core 1GHz CPU which reportedly makes it 40% faster than previous models. It also has 1GB RAM, 8GB internal storage, a microSD card slot, Wifi, and a smartcover.

The 7.8" Carta E-ink screen has a resolution of 300 ppi (1404 x 1872 pixels), and the 740 is also equipped with a capacitive touchscreen and a color-changing frontlight. Weighing only 210 grams, this ereader measures 195 x 136.5 mm and has a thickness of only 8 mm.

This is a tempting ereader, especially when you consider the price. The Pocketbook 740 costs 14999 rubles, or $266 USD. That is only slightly more than the $249 price of the new Kindle Oasis.

Pocketbook.ru


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Fire Tablets, Kindle eReaders on Sale for Valentine’s Day

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Fire Tablets, Kindle eReaders on Sale for Valentine's Day e-Reading Hardware Fire Kindle

Amazon is celebrating Valentine's Day with a sale on its ereaders and tablets. Both the basic Kindle and the Paperwhite are marked down $20, and the Fire HD 8, HD 10, and Fire 7 are all $10 to $30 off.

They're also offering a Valentine's Day bundle for the Paperwhite that includes a cover and either a tote bag or travel bag for $146 and $149, respectively. And on a related note, Amazon has  also put its other hardware on sale (this appears to be a Super Bowl deal, though).

Here’s the list of Fire tablet and Kindle deals:

Kindles

 

Fire Tablets

 


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Tearing Down a $1000 E-ink Monitor

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Tearing Down a $1000 E-ink Monitor e-Reading Hardware

Most ereaders, tablets, and other gadgets eventually make it through the FCC, giving us a look inside, but the Dasung Paperlike has kept its secrets.

Until now.

A few days back Kevin Zettler posted the results of his teardown of the Paperlike Pro. He bought one with the intention of building an E-ink laptop, and he posted photos of the teardown so that we could all benefit.

This is a follow up to my previous Dasung Paperlike Pro Review post. For visitors landing here, a quick recap. The Dasung Paperlike Pro is billed as “The worlds first HDMI e-ink monitor” It is high performance for a e-ink display and renders at about 40fps. Check the review post for more info.

I Bought the Dasung with intentions to tear it down for ‘research’ purposes. Mainly to confirm what e-ink display module they were using. This research was for the goal of building an e-ink laptop. In this post I will walk through my experience dismantling the Dasung and discuss its internal components. Hopefully readers will find this useful in their own e-ink hardware projects, or in the chance they need to repair a Dasung.

The post is short on specifics (he hasn't identified the component chips yet) but we do know that the Pro was relatively easy to take apart. Once  Kevin pried the front bezel off, he found that the screen was secured to the rear shell with screws. Once those were removed, disassembling the Pro was about as simple as unplugging the screen and then removing the screws that hold the one circuit board in place.

Speaking of which, Dasung hid a joke on the circuit board:

Tearing Down a $1000 E-ink Monitor e-Reading Hardware

Gotta love that sense of humor, don't you?

Kevin Zettler via Hackaday


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Boyue Likebook Note Features 10.3″ Screen, Runs Android 4.4

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Boyue Likebook Note Features 10.3" Screen, Runs Android 4.4 e-Reading Hardware

Soon the Remarkable writing tablet and the Onyx Boox Note won't be the only 10.3" writing slates on the market.

A reader has tipped me to the Likebook Note, a new 10.3" ereader from Chinese OEM Boyue. (Thanks, Carlos!)

The Likebook Note is a 10.3" ereader that runs Android 4.4 on a 1GHz single-core CPU with 1GB RAM and 16GB internal storage.

It's powered by a 4.7Ah battery and has Wifi, Bluetooth, a headphone jack, a USB type-C port, and speakers, and is only 7.5mm thick.

The 10.3" Carta E-ink screen has a screen resolution of 1404 x 1872 as well as a capacitive touchscreen and an electromagnetic stylus.

Boyue Likebook Note Features 10.3" Screen, Runs Android 4.4 e-Reading Hardware While it is great to see another large-screen ereader, the Likebook Note really has nothing to recommend it. It's running an old version of Android on an average-power CPU. And what's worse is that it is ruined by a USB type-C connection.

Adding that port almost makes me think Boyue set out to make the most pointless update they could. They didn't update the OS, they didn't improve the CPU, but they did add a type-C port.

If you like this device, you should wait for either the second model or for Boyue to come to their senses and revise the design with better hardware.

Based on what we see right now, the Likebook Note deserves a hard pass.


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PocketBook 740 Relaunched as the InkPad 3

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PocketBook has dashed the hopes of anyone who was hoping for a beautiful new InkPad model; instead this ereader maker has slapped the label on the 740.

Announced last month, the 740 features a 7.8" Carta E-ink screen. It's going to be a reasonably powerful ereader when it ships, but it is also missing one of the better features of the InkPad and InkPad 2: it is missing the page turn buttons to one side of the screen.

PocketBook 740 Relaunched as the InkPad 3 e-Reading Hardware

The new InkPad 3 runs Pocketbook's own reading software on a dual-core 1GHz CPU with 1GB RAM 1GB RAM, 8GB internal storage, and a microSD card slot.

It does not have Bluetooth or speakers, so far as we know, but it does have Wifi, a headphone jack, and a smartcover. It can play MP3s, and it can conver text into speech.

The InkPad 3 has a 7.8" Carta E-ink screen with a resolution of 300 ppi (1404 x 1872 pixels) and a capacitive touchscreen and a color-changing frontlight. Weighing only 210 grams, this ereader measures 195 x 136.5 mm and has a thickness of only 8 mm.

The InkPad 3 is already shipping in Russia as the Pocketbook 740, where it  costs 14999 rubles, or $266 USD.

That is only slightly more than the $249 price of the new Kindle Oasis, but the Oasis has something the InkPad 3 lacks: well-placed page turn buttons.

I didn't criticize the 740 on this issue when it launched, but once Pocketbook decided the 740 was also the InkPad 3, that new label brought to mind the best features of the previous InkPad models, which featured a one-handed design with page turn buttons to one side of the screen.

PocketBook 740 Relaunched as the InkPad 3 e-Reading Hardware

original InkPad

While the new InkPad 3 is a good and powerful ereader, I for one wish the it had kept those page turn buttons. They would have driven me to spend my limited funds on an InkPad 3. It would have had the ebook formatting options I liked in a hardware design I loved.

Oh, well, maybe Kobo will hear my pleading and put out the ereader I want (a fellow can dream).


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If eReaders Are Dead Then So Are Film Cameras. And Horse Riding. And Fountain Pens. And Digital Cameras. And Lots of Other Stuff

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If eReaders Are Dead Then So Are Film Cameras. And Horse Riding. And Fountain Pens. And Digital Cameras. And Lots of Other Stuff DeBunking e-Reading Hardware

Last week Tom's Hardware published a piece which used flawed assumptions to ask whether the ereader was dead:

Yes, reading now is a little bit different than it was even a decade ago. While print books are doing surprisingly well, bigger and better smartphones have given e-books a second life. After 10 years of uncertainty, it seems that we finally live in a world where readers of both print and digital books can live in peace with each other. Neither one is going away anytime soon.

And yet, there may be a tragic undercurrent to this otherwise-happy story. While e-books are doing just fine, the fate of the devices dedicated exclusively to those e-books is much murkier. E Ink readers, like the Amazon Kindle and the Barnes & Noble Nook are much less widespread than they used to be — and arguably, much less necessary.

...

Ten years ago, the Kindle was essentially the only game in town for e-books. But now, it's just as easy to read on your computer, your tablet, your phone — or even all three, thanks to cross-compatible apps. (It's worth noting, too, that the dangers of reading on LCD screens have been greatly exaggerated.)

In a world where convenience is king and delayed gratification is a dirty phrase, is there any room for a device that does only one thing and can't do that thing nearly as fast as the supercomputer in your pocket?

This post inspired a discussion over at MobileRead and a rehashing at Teleread. I don't plan to get involved other than to point out the fundamental flaw in the question.

This debate is predicated on the assumption that if the ereader is less popular now than in the past then it must be dead. The flaw becomes obvious once we apply the same assumption to other technologies.

Take film cameras, for example. They have largely been supplanted by digital cameras, so film cameras must be dead. And yet you can still buy film cameras because people are still using them.

Or, horseback riding. Horses were a fundamental part of our transportation system, but they've been replaced by cars and other vehicles, so horseback riding must be dead. And yet you can still buy saddles, and buy or rent horses; people are still using them. *

And then there are fountain pens, which have largely been replaced by ballpoint and other mass-produced pens.

And yet you can still buy a fountain pen.

With a little work I could go on and list a dozen other examples of tech that, based on the logic of this argument, are just as dead as ereaders, and yet are still being manufactured and used to this day.

Can you really say something is dead if that is the case?

 

image by petter palander


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Amazon Launches Kindle Sale for National Reading Month

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Amazon Launches Kindle Sale for National Reading Month e-Reading Hardware Kindle

The month of March is National Reading Month here in the US, and Amazon is using that as another opportunity to put a few of its ereaders on sale.

The sale is rather light on selection this time around, and doesn't include the Oasis or the Voyage.


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Canute Braille eReader Will Cost About the Same as an iPhone

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Multi-line Braille ereaders are the holy grail of reading technology, and it looks like one may soon be available to buy.

UK startup Bristol Braille Technology has developed the Canute, a multi-line Braille reader that is expected to retail for "around the cost of a new iPhone, not far off the price of a Perkins Brailler," BBT said on their website. "That’s around twenty times cheaper per cell than existing digital Braille devices."

Canute is the world’s first viable multi-line refreshable Braille e-reader; a ‘Kindle for blind people’. Available for a price comparable to a new iPhone or Perkins Brailler, Canute has been developed by Bristol Braille Technology with, by, and for the blind community.

Canute has been in development since 2012. In March 2018 it will begin its final pre-production testing pilot, prior to beginning sales later in the year. We’d love to give a specific release date, but its important to us to be transparent with our users: we want to hear back from the pilot programme feedback before we give a definitive date, and we don’t want to rush to market, only to deliver a sub-standard machine.

The Canute is supposed to hit the market later this year, but in the mean time BBT is showing off the Canute next Friday at the Royal National Institute Of Blind People. So if you are in London, you can check it out.

Other Braille tablets include the Blitab and an ongoing research project at the University of Michigan. Neither device has been released yet.

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Guest Post: The Importance of Actually Unplugging on National Day of Unplugging

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Guest Post: The Importance of Actually Unplugging on National Day of Unplugging e-Reading Hardware Editorials

by 

Instead of a smartphone, I have an old school cellphone.

I can’t use it to check social media sites to see what my friends are up to. It won’t help me avoid traffic jams. And if I want to order a pizza, I need to use it by actually speaking to another human being.

I use the phone as little as possible. I know. I’m an anachronism — an old fuddy duddy who is out of step with the march of history.

But a slew of new research is revealing that my inability to immerse myself in my phone may be good for me, just like unplugging from your phone on occasion may be good for you.

March 9-10 is the National Day of Unplugging, a 24-hour respite from technology aimed at getting us to disconnect from our devices so we can connect with ourselves, our loved ones and our communities.

It was created by Reboot, an organization dedicated to affirming Jewish traditions that everyone can apply — in this case, the value of slowing down and enjoying a Sabbath. The National Day of Unplugging highlights the fact that our smartphones have become like another appendage that we can’t seem to take our eyes off of. According to the Pew Research Center, 95 per cent of Americans now own a cellphone of some sort, and 77 per cent of them are smartphones.

Despite not having a smartphone myself, I became aware of all the negative consequences of being constantly connected because of the research I conducted for a book I recently wrote called Boost: The Science of Recharging Yourself in an Age of Unrelenting Demands. (Information Age Publishing.) The book, coming out this spring, explores the benefits of occasionally cutting the virtual cord and unplugging from your phone — and trust me, there are plenty.

Unplugging is good for your health

Having smart technology constantly at our fingertips has its advantages, but as a professor of organizational behaviour, I’ve also determined it comes with a slew of disadvantages, particularly when it comes to our health and well-being.

For starters, being constantly connected creates unpredictability. Your peaceful Saturday morning can take an abrupt turn because of an email message from an annoyed colleague. Being constantly connected can suddenly propel you from relaxation mode to work mode, and this unpredictability causes stress, insecurity and a constant state of activation.

In fact, research shows that compared to employees who are never contacted outside of normal working hours for work-related matters, those who are contacted, even occasionally, suffer numerous health impairments.

Not only can this constant connection wreak havoc on your physical well-being, but on your mental health as well. One of the greatest benefits of unplugging from your phone is that it helps you relax and mentally get away from your job.

There is a growing amount of research showing that using phones during our leisure time interferes with our ability to psychologically disconnect from work and recover from the stress and demands we face on a daily basis.

When we unplug, we give ourselves the time and space to decompress and recharge, which makes us feel better and actually makes us more effective when we return to work.

Unplugging enhances your relationships

Because our phones help us connect to others, we tend to think that they enhance our relationships. To be sure, when we are apart from others, our phones can keep us linked together.

But when we spend time in the presence of other people, our phones can push us apart. Known as “phubbing,” spending time on our smartphone when we are with someone hinders our relationship with that person.

How often do you check your phone when you’re out for a meal with friends or family? Have you ever considered that checking your phone for updates could undermine your dining experience? New research shows that when people check their phones while sharing a meal with others, they don’t enjoy themselves as much.

They don’t feel as close and connected to other people, they suffer more tension and are more bored.

And what do people typically do these days when they sit down at their table at a restaurant? They put their phone on the table, right? Well, research shows that simply having a phone in your line of sightcompromises your experience of the quality of the relationships you have with others.

If you want to enjoy feelings of closeness, connection, and intimacy with your friends and family, you need to put away your phone.

Unplug and give yourself a breather

It can be tough to cut the virtual cord on occasion and disconnect from your phone.

But it’s a smart strategy to keep your head straight in an online world that is increasingly full of vitriolic trolls, apps that are intentionally addictive, and propaganda-inspired media that serves to confuse instead of enlighten.

So how do you do this? In my book, I provide strategies on how to successfully recover and in this particular area, how to recover by disconnecting. Instead of one day dedicated to unplugging, I argue it should be a daily ritual.

I suggest setting aside a block of time each evening when you will not check your phone at all and instead do something that is technology-free such as walking the dog, playing with your kids or pursuing a hobby.

Another tactic I suggest is to use different phones for work and personal matters. This way you can ignore your work phone when you are away from the office. Or you can set a time limit on how long you make yourself available electronically after the work day is over.

This could be the moment you hop in your car and drive home or when you sit down for dinner. It all depends on what you feel comfortable with.

But if you do this, it’s important you stick to it. If you end up caving and answering emails or texts during your off hours, then you set up the expectation from others that you are and will be available at all times.

Another tactic is simply turning off the ringer or vibration that goes off whenever you receive a new email or text message. For some, these subtle signals are impossible to ignore, so it’s best just avoid the temptation altogether.

And if all of this leaves you feeling stressed about how people will respond to you being disconnected, you can set up your phone to send automatic replies to people letting them know you will respond to them later.

It’s likely I will need to get with the program and begin using a smartphone soon. I don’t want technological life to pass me by. But when I get my new phone, I plan to use it consciously, appreciative of its benefits, but also aware of its drawbacks.

I’ll also take periodic vacations from my smartphone to keep my head clear and foster the best life I can. And I’m pretty sure I’ll reminisce fondly about my old school phone, mindful that its many limitations offered their own advantages.

reposted under a CC license from The Conversation

Guest Post: The Importance of Actually Unplugging on National Day of Unplugging e-Reading Hardware Editorials images by wuestenigel

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Sony’s New DPT-CP1 Digital Paper eReader Clears the FCC

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Sony's New DPT-CP1 Digital Paper eReader Clears the FCC e-Reading Hardware

Sony is about to release a third model in their Digital Paper line of writing tablets, only this time it's not made by Sony.

The Taiwan OEM Netronix filed a new set of FCC paperwork today for what Netronix is calling the Digital Paper DPT-CP1. According to the test reports and the FCC label info submitted in the paperwork, this device belongs to Sony.

 

All the interesting details, including the manual and product photos, have been embargoed until mid-April, but Sony's name as well as the Digital Paper brand is mentioned repeatedly throughout the paperwork.

I couldn't find any details on the screen size, but we do know that this device was tested for Wifi, Bluetooth, and NFC.  There's also no mention of a headphone jack or audio, but the paperwork did note that the power is supplied by a USB cable.

We're going to have to wait for a month or so to find out more.

If this really is a Sony device (and I beleive it is) then it will be the third model in Son'y line of large screen E-ink writing slates. The first model, the DPT-S1, debuted in 2013, while the second model, the DPT-RP1, launched last April.

You might be surprised that the new device has been outsourced, but I am not because I am 100% that the DPT-RP1 had also been outsourced.

Sony started developing the Digital Paper line back when it had an ereader division, but by 2017 the company had gone through several rounds of downsizing when unprofitable divisions where shut down. It would make a lot of sense to outsource hardware development at this time, and focus on software.

This explains why the first Digital Paper ran Android 2.1, just like Sony's previous Sony Readers, while the second Digital Paper ran Android 5; someone else developed the OS running on the hardware.

And now the new Digital Paper is coming from Netronix.

Coincidentally, this company also makes ereaders for Kobo and B&N, and it files FCC paperwork on their behalf - covered in the respective brands.

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Sony DPT-RP1 Firmware Update Adds Scrolling, External Monitor Support

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Sony DPT-RP1 Firmware Update Adds Scrolling, External Monitor Support e-Reading Hardware e-Reading Software

Sony is going to be releasing an update to its second Digital Paper ereader this spring, and they are adding some pretty basic features.

  • Scrolling: You can now shift the screen up, down, left and right with your finger to any position. You can browse the page freely while enlarging it.
  • Jump to any page directly: Like DPT-S1, it is now possible to specify arbitrary pages with numbers and open them.
  • External monitor: You can mirror the DPT-RP1's screen to a large - sized display device via a PC with the new version of the Digital Paper companion app that is going to be released at the same time as the new new firmware. You will be able to manipulate the screen of the DPT-RP1, and immediately see the changes on the larger screen.

The new support for external displays is nice, but scrolling and jumping to specific pages are two features that all ereaders had six or eight years ago.

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Kindle Paperwhite Refurb with 32GB $89 at Woot

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Kindle Paperwhite Refurb with 32GB $89 at Woot e-Reading Hardware Kindle Amazon is selling the 32GB Kindle Paperwhite through Woot again for $89. The units are listed as refurbished, and you have you choice of black or white.

These are the latest model, and they have Wifi and special offers. They are equipped with a 300 ppi screen and 8 times the storage available on the standard Kindle Paperwhite model. That is good news for those who like PDFs or audiobooks on their Paperwhite, but it is overkill for the rest of us.

Edit: Sorry, that was wish fulfillment - I am hoping the next model will have BT and support Audiobooks.

Woot

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Kindle Oasis Now Available in Champagne Gold

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Amazon has just announced a third color option for the Kindle Oasis 2. In addition to black and gold, you now have the choice of champagne gold.

It is up for pre-order today for  $279.99, and it will start shipping on 22 March. It is only available with 32GB of storage and Wifi (but not 3G).

It seems rather odd to release a limited color option like this, given that the Oasis cases are going to cover the back and render your color choice irrelevant, but at least it is pretty.

Kindle Oasis Now Available in Champagne Gold e-Reading Hardware Kindle

 

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Is Amazon Shutting Down Liquavista?

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Is Amazon Shutting Down Liquavista? e-Reading Hardware Rumors

There is an unconfirmed report coming out of the Netherlands today that Amazon is shutting down its screen tech subsidiary. Citing unnamed sources, tech blog Bits &Chips claims that Amazon decided last year that it would close Liquavista.  Amazon is reportedly busy dismantling the startup, and plans to phase out the staff in the course of the coming year.

Amazon was asked to comment on this story about 3 hours before it was published, but has not responded.

For the past decade or so Liquavista has been developing a low-powered screen tech to replace LCD screens. Their designs were based on electrowetting technology, which is a fancy way of saying that each pixel in a Liquavista screen contained 3 liquids (red, green, blue), and that the color shown by a pixel depended on the amount of power fed into each liquid.

The tech was originally developed at Philips, before Liquavista was spun out in 2006. Over the following decade the startup showed off demo screens on several occasions, but it never put the screen into production, and it was never closer than a perpetual two years away from releasing a screen unit to market.

And now it looks like it never will be releasing that first screen.

I was the first to report that Samsung bought Liquavista in 2011, and the first to report that it had been sold to Amazon in 2013, and now it looks like I just may be the first to report Liquavista's demise.

In a way, I'm not surprised. It was pretty clear when Samsung sold Liquavista in 2013 that there wasn't much of a market for the screen tech by that point; the original intended use was as a solution to the mobile device battery life issue, and that problem had already mostly been fixed by 2013.

There was no need to use a new screen tech when battery capacity was already improving year by year, and screens were getting more and more energy efficient. Nevertheless, some of us had been hoping Amazon would push through and bring the new screen to market just so it could have a Kindle screen that no other ereader could match. (I even made it an April Fool's day joke in 2016, and I was so convincing that someone actually stole the joke and claimed it was real.)

And now it looks like we won't see it at all.

Thanks, Javi, for the tip!

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