Sony Reader T1 Hacked 50
Nate the greatest writes "It's been just over a month since the T1 launched and only a couple weeks since it shipped — and it has already been hacked. A video has surfaced that shows the T1 running a number of apps, including a new home screen, AW Launcher, and a couple of different reading apps. It can't run Angry Birds just yet, but this is still great news. There aren't any details yet on when you'll be able to hack your T1, but I bet they'll be filtering out fairly soon."
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Maybe if the tablets were half the price of the iPad
Are you trolling? These tablets are priced at €150, while an iPad starts at €499. Why would you want them to be more expensive? And they have an e-ink screen.
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e-books fills a niche that tablets are ill suited to.
As for hating on Sony; it is true, they are easy to hate at times, but Sony divisions are essentially separate companies in a lot of ways. Their e-books are nothing like the rest of Sony. While they do have their own proprietary book format, their readers are also among the ones with the broadest format support. The only "popular" format they don't support is MobiPocket, used by the Kindle.
Imho, Sony's Readers are pretty much everything we loved about Son
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B&W? (Score:2)
What is this, the way back machine?
Re:B&W? (Score:4, Informative)
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It's a book. An electronic book, but still essentially a book. And unlike the tablets, these can run for weeks on a charge.
You really don't need colours for a book. Well, most people don't, some need pretty pictures to understand the story, at which point you probably need colours too.
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I love the fact my Kindle Keyboard (that's what they call it now) can display PDF files since most product manuals are shipped as PDF's now. Of course now I want a Kindle DX since it has a screen closer to the size of a piece of letter sized paper. Sure it's close to $400 but i think it would be easier to get one of those than to convince all the tech companies to make their PDF manuals for smaller screens.
what about the Kindle at $80? (Score:2)
Since you mention the Kindle, I'll slip in this question about the Kindle. Apparently they are $80 on Amazon now, which is cheaper than the HP $99 WebOS tablet (but of course it also does less).
How hackable is the Kindle? Is it worth it at $80?
I basically want something to hold *MY* documents to read, either HTML or text (but I can convert to PDF, etc.). Would be a bonus to be able to edit them, save under subdirectories, etc. but that would be secondary. Would be a bonus to be able to grab documents wi
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How hackable is the Kindle?
Not very. It's a device for reading on. If you want to do something other than that, you should go for a tablet instead
Is it worth it at $80?
Very much so. I bought the Wifi Kindle Keyboard (when it was called the Kindle 3rd edition) for 110GBP, and a case for 30, (total $220) and consider it money well spent.
I basically want something to hold *MY* documents to read, either HTML or text (but I can convert to PDF, etc.).
No problem, you can email them to your kindle email address (free if you use the wifi only address) or just copy them over USB, the Kindle mounts as generic USB storage. It doesn't handle HTML, but plain text and PDF are fin
Thanks. Mod parent informative (Score:2)
anon coward replying with useful info; currently at +0.
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Mine actually has a web browser under "experimental". The browser isn't the best, but it isn't bad, I was working on servers on a vertical rack in a server closet and someone emailed info I needed to my Gmail account, if you do this select the "basic HTML" option on GMail for the device or it keeps reloading the page and it really sucks. I never tried pulling up a local HTML file with it.
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the $80 kindle is ad-supported. If you want the Ad-Free version, it'll cost you $150. You also don't get an SD card slot to increase the storage.
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...but i think it would be easier to get one of those than to convince all the tech companies to make their PDF manuals for smaller screens.
Now that I'm no longer a student, this is less important to me, but I would have really appreciated being able to carry around my biochemistry and molecular biology textbooks on an e-reader when I was an undergrad. Those damn books were fucking heavy.
But 3 years down the track, the technology is only just getting there for this kind of publication. Diagrams in this kind of textbook are heavily (and indispensably) reliant on colour, and my eyesight would need to be better than it is to cope with small pag
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Can't wait for color e-ink. Even if it's crappy color like the 1980's it would be good enough for most technical / graph type info, boost it up to 256 it would be great for cartoonish graphics. I admit I only want color for a very limited number of reasons and I'm perfectly happy with gray scale for books and even most of the user manuals I mentioned, but yes, magazine subscriptions on color e-ink would be nice. I don't really want to go the LCD route, I've got enough LCD devices as it is, the reason I g
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PDF rendering in Kindle is rather poor. Sony 950 (most A4 PDFs fit in landscape mode if you cut margins at nearly 1:1) is probably the best for such PDFs. (they also use Adobe's viewer that is superior to amazon's)
And in my humble opinion reading technical stuff would benefit more from going to bigger screens, rather than losing contrast and adding colors.
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Friends Don't Let Friends Buy Sony (Score:2, Troll)
OK, technically interesting, but these are the people who build notebooks where the letters rub off the keys and ship rootkits.
Friends don't let friends buy Sony.
Ganty
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Normally I would begrudgingly agree with this, but with eBook readers, Sony have one of the better builds and the software isn't half bad either.
giving sony money for e-readers just encourages them to continue to exist. they do too much damage to be permitted that.
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And their competition is so much better?
The sad fact is that just about all vendors in these market segments shaft their customers one way or another, Sony just got caught doing so in some slightly more spectacular cases than the rest have yet to experience.
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The sad fact is that the majority of people just pirate music and movies these days anyway. The associations intent on stopping this try and pummel the ones they catch into the ground in order to deter the same behaviour in others. As Sony have been caught shafting their customers in a spectac
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actually, the competition *is* much better [kobobooks.com].
ebooks are cheaper on the whole for the Kobo, and the Kobo has a *much* larger library of ebooks available, including a very large selection of free ebooks, thanks to integration of their marketplace with Project Gutenberg and Smashbooks. Kobo also has the largest selection of international books in the bookstore of any of the manufacturers, which makes them a much better option for anybody living outside of the US, or who wants to read books in non-English languag
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As someone who has also had both, the Sony product is much more finished. My Kobo was missing all kinds of features that would be nice to have in an ebook reader. Such as turning to a specific page, or using the build in dictionary with any document, not just those purchased from Kobo. The kept promising features like these in "the next release", but honestly I hate it when I buy something unfinished and have to beg the company to do what they said they would up front.
Also, my battery was always going de
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Brings back fond memories!
The What reader? (Score:2, Interesting)
So, did the one person who purchased one hack it? The marketshare of this thing is so tiny in the U.S., I can only imagine Sony continues to distribute them here out of some sense of corporate stubbornness, just as with their ATRAC music players that for years could not play an MP3. I can only imagine that these have some kind of viable market in Asia, where the Kindle and Nook don't exist. (do they?)
I suppose it's not entirely broken by design (previous models in the line had serious shortcomings), but t
Re:The What reader? (Score:4, Informative)
Regarding TFA, it was "rooted" "old, non-android way", used to flash custom firmwares for earlier models.
Up to T1 model, Sony (well not exactly Sony, Kinoma) was using proprietary engine. (that also ran on other platforms, including Windows) They've sw
Offtopic:
x50 line of Sony Readers is actually superior to both Nook and Kindle and has quite a number of followers, also in US.
Product having little market share has more to do with marketing, than actual quality. (I find sony walkman (yep, they also do mp3 player, imagine that) vastly superior to apple/samsung's offerings.)
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I agree. I started from nook classic to kobo, then SONY Reader prs-350, and the last one wins in every category (battery, page flip speed, build quality, etc).
Sony Reader + Calibre combo is the "free" version of closed Kindle and the likes.
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Sony Reader + Calibre combo is the "free" version of closed Kindle and the likes.
Agreed. Throw in the Calibre plugins to automatically strip DRM (google Apprentice Alf) and you've got the perfect setup. Ebook purchase -> Kindle4PC / ADE -> Calibre -> Sony Reader is literally a one minute operation. It's almost as easy as using the Kindle, and a lot better as you end up with a future-proof copy in your archive as well. As a voracious reader who likes to pay for his books I'm in heaven :)
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You can't put it on most current iPods either. Anything after 5.5g or nano 2g looks like a no-go (source: rockbox.org).
I'm definitely with you on the 505 though. I still use mine when my NC battery dies (I do love the NC's backlight, though), and I think it's particularly awesome that I can use calibre to manage both.
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Regarding TFA, it was "rooted" "old, non-android way", used to flash custom firmwares for earlier models.
Up to T1 model, Sony (well not exactly Sony, Kinoma) was using proprietary engine. (that also ran on other platforms, including Windows) They've sw
Offtopic:
x50 line of Sony Readers is actually superior to both Nook and Kindle and has quite a number of followers, also in US.
Product having little market share has more to do with marketing, than actual quality. (I find sony walkman (yep, they also do mp3 player, imagine that) vastly superior to apple/samsung's offerings.)
ya, except i'm going to pay $79 for a kindle, not $130 for a Sony.
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Care to name a few "broken by design" points of the previous models? 505 and 650 in particular.
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Their readers are the odd ones under the Sony umbrella. Open format support, plays MP3 and AAC, not ATRAC, and they use SD cards. (MicroSD in the case of the T1).
The Kindle is a different beast, closed without open format support. The Kindle is pretty much everything we usually hate about Sony and Apple.
In other words (Score:2)
Hackers add end-user value to product (by making it more flexible and/or versatile).
Next up: manufacturer works hard to reduce product's end-user value to what it was before.
NookTouch (Score:2)
Can't see the NookTouch mentioned on this particular thread so I'll mention it here. I've got it doing these things already, including VNC to Firefox for when you get tired and your laptop screen goes fuzzy, RSS readers, better PDF support, dropbox, Bitcoin wallet and tickers, ssh tunnelling, offline maps via MapDroyd (can see in sunlight), ReaditLater & Kindle.
Rooting is very simple, but the Sony build quality might be better. Things would be simpler if both devices had Cyanogenmod7.
Feel free to join
How Is This News? (Score:2)
just to make sure.. (Score:1)