The iRex DR800SG E-Reader will be coming to Best Buy with unlimited Verizon 3G data support. This update on the iRex e-reader of just a year ago has an 8.1 inch touchscreen that also allows you to directly annotate material and will sell for $399.
(iRex DR800SG E-Reader)
The device will be able to wirelessly download books from Barnes and Noble's e-book store as well as over 1,000 newspapers from Newspapers Direct. It also takes books in the ePub format. Take a look at this brief iRex DR800SG E-Reader hands-on video.
(iRex DR800SG E-Reader hands-on video)
This device is getting pretty close to the opton from Stanislaw Lem's Return from the Stars, a prescient 1961 novel. Lem never thought about the possibility of wireless downloads, however.
I spent the afternoon in a bookstore. There were no books in it. None had been printed for nearly half a century. And how I have looked forward to them, after the micro films that made up the library of the Prometheus! No such luck. No longer was it possible to browse among shelves, to weigh volumes in hand, to feel their heft, the promise of ponderous reading. The bookstore resembled, instead, an electronic laboratory. The books were crystals with recorded contents. They can be read the aid of an opton, which was similar to a book but had only one page between the covers. At a touch, successive pages of the text appeared on it...
(Read more about the opton e-book reader)
Peel And Stick Thin Film Solar Cells
'It turns sunlight into electricity, just like any solar power converter, but you spray it on.'- Larry Niven, 1995.
Technovelgy (that's tech-novel-gee!)
is devoted to the creative science inventions and ideas of sf authors. Look for
the Invention Category that interests
you, the Glossary, the Invention
Timeline, or see what's New.
Sky City's 220 Stories Are Go
'It rested among green parklands and... stood in total isolation, a glittering block of whites and flashing windows dotted with colors.'
Robo-Raven Flapping Wing Robot Bird
'When he had first built them, they had been crude indeed, flying mechanisms with little more than a reflex-response unit.'