Sat 11 Oct 2008

RSS Feed

Edited by Paul Hales

Published by Incisive Media Investments Ltd.

Terms and Conditions of use.

To advertise in Europe e-mail here

To advertise in Asia email here.

To advertise in North America email here.

Join the INQbot Mail List for a weekly guide to our news stories:

Subscribe

Esquire makes E-ink the cover star

Kindle-a-like

GENTS MAG ESQUIRE is set to become the first paper magazine to use an E-ink display in its newsstand cover.

A bastion of American culture, Esquire's archive of magazine covers is currently on display in the MoMA in New York, and to celebrate the occasion, the E-ink display will feature on next month's issue with the message: "The 21st Century Begins Now".

Ford has sponsored the display, which will be inserted into 100,000 copies of the magazine at no extra cost to the buyer, and the magazine will have a Ford ad using the E-ink on the inside cover.

Hearst, which publishes the rag, reckons it has invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in making the technology work, from hand-assembly of the displays to the battery that will power the display for the 90 days it's on sale. The magazines have to be transported by refrigerator to keep the battery fresh, apparently.

E-ink is currently used on devices like the Amazon Kindle, but this is believed to be the first 'mainstream' roll-out of the technology.

Now if only they could get their hot celebrity pictorials done on LCDs and inserted for our animated pleasure - that might be worth paying for. µ

Comments

undue advertisement

Listing only the Amazon Kindle as e-ink using application - probably the worst of the ereaders - smacks of undue advertisement. It would have been more prudent to either list a few e-ink employing ereaders (Amazon's Kindle, Sony's Reader, iRex' Iliad), or only mentioned that it is used in commercial ereaders without mentioning brand/model name.
posted by : Mike Kamermans, 22 July 2008

oh for...

that's hardly an advertisement, it's called using the english language and providing a real world example to clarify the point.

Yes he could have said "e-ink is used in several e-ink based commercial reading devices" but that would just be vague and clunky.
or he could have indeed said "e-ink is used on devices like the Amazon Kindle, Sony's reader, the IRex Iliad and many more" but that's just dumb.
posted by : Ivor, 23 July 2008
IThound
Search for solutions, reports & analysis

Newsletter signup



 

Top INQ Stories