E-reader as a text editor?
- Grond
- Location: Milan, Italy
- Main keyboard: Keychron K2
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade
- Favorite switch: Cherry MX Blue
- DT Pro Member: -
I don't own any e-book reader and I have basically no knowledge on the features offered by the different models. I was wondering, can any of those run a text editor and support an external keyboard? I think that would make a nice way for writing text, with an e-ink screen and distraction-free.
-
- Location: Germany
- DT Pro Member: -
the positive effekt would be reversed by the tiny screen
- Ekaros
- Location: Finland,
- Main keyboard: FILCO MAJESTOUCH 105 MX Brown SW/FI
- Main mouse: Razer
- Favorite switch: MX Clear
- DT Pro Member: -
Not realy good idea. Partial update of screen isn't too nice looking and full update is tad slow and also bit bothersome. It isn't realy so distraction free when it updates, but as you do it once per page it doesn't matter as you can take tiny-break between pages.
Eink can be any size, bigger is just sold less so the control electronics are more expensive and bigger.
Eink can be any size, bigger is just sold less so the control electronics are more expensive and bigger.
- webwit
- Wild Duck
- Location: The Netherlands
- Main keyboard: Model F62
- Favorite switch: IBM beam spring
- DT Pro Member: 0000
- Contact:
I love my e-reader. I don't think any support what you want though, out of the box. Also although mine has a touch type keyboard to take notes and even a stylus for drawing and handwriting, the screen is just too slow to be really usable for inputting larger texts.
- nathanscribe
- Location: Yorkshire, UK.
- Main keyboard: Filco tenkeyless w/blues
- Main mouse: Kensington Expert
- Favorite switch: MX Blue
- DT Pro Member: -
DIstraction-free text entry is what I use my Alphasmart Neo 2 and Tandy WP-3 for. The Tandy hooks up to my DOS machine via serial port, the Neo to my Mac via USB. The battery life on the Neo is something like 700 hours, so no fear of it giving up on you half way through something important.
- mrog
- Location: Berkshire, UK
- Main keyboard: Dell AT102W - Seeking other keyboards
- Main mouse: Logitech G5
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
A while back I went for the Sony PRS650, partially based on its better than kindle PDF support.sordna wrote:What's the best e-reader for someone who cares mostly about PDF and text documents? I tried the Kindle but it rather sucked for that.
If you view a pdf on the Sony at size 'small' it'll render the pdf as normal, if you do any other size then it will attempt to 'reflow' the pdf text, allowing you to zoom in/out without having to pan left and right constantly while reading.
The attempt to reflow is never perfect however, but it is actually still the best pdf reflowing I've managed to find.
Using Calibre to convert pdfs to other formats generally is a bit rubbish, and Amazon's PDF converter service (you email then the book and they convert it) is also pretty poor.
Generally speaking pdfs are difficult to manage on the ebooks, but side by side the Sony beats the Amazon Kindle.
As a final note, the new range of Sony ebook readers now use android as their base OS and I can't comment on how well they work. But an interesting point to consider is that with a rooted Sony ebook reader you can install the Amazon ebook reader application and get the best of both worlds!
- Lustique
- Location: Germany
- Main keyboard: G81-3424LPNDE-0/00
- Main mouse: Kensington Orbit Scroll Ring Trackball
- Favorite switch: Buckling Cherry MY bruewck
- DT Pro Member: -
Do these e-readers display equations (in pdfs, something like this) properly (or other vector-based things), or are they only able to display "normal" text?
-
- Count Troller
- DT Pro Member: -
PDF is simplified PostScript. So, yes, it should display everything.Lustique wrote:Do these e-readers display equations (in pdfs, something like this) properly (or other vector-based things), or are they only able to display "normal" text?
Kindle displays PDFs fine. There are few levels of zoom ("fit-to-screen", 150%, 200%, 300%, "actual size"), panning with the cursor nub, and fine panning with Shift + cursor nub. No problems with tech, musical and even scanned PDFs so far. But that is on DX, which is the only size/resolution I'd think about reading PDFs on.
@sixty: have you updated the firmware?
- Lustique
- Location: Germany
- Main keyboard: G81-3424LPNDE-0/00
- Main mouse: Kensington Orbit Scroll Ring Trackball
- Favorite switch: Buckling Cherry MY bruewck
- DT Pro Member: -
Ah ok, thanks. I was wandering whether they are able to do this, since I am considering to buy an e-reader for some time now, so I don't have to turn my PC or laptop on if I want to look something up in my rather big ebook-collection (mostly textbooks) or lecture notes and such.sixty wrote:It works on the kindle, but the kindle has piss poor PDF support. Basically it handles all PDFs as raster images. There is no zooming and panning.
woody wrote:PDF is simplified PostScript. So, yes, it should display everything.Lustique wrote:Do these e-readers display equations (in pdfs, something like this) properly (or other vector-based things), or are they only able to display "normal" text?
Kindle displays PDFs fine. There are few levels of zoom ("fit-to-screen", 150%, 200%, 300%, "actual size"), panning with the cursor nub, and fine panning with Shift + cursor nub. No problems with tech, musical and even scanned PDFs so far. But that is on DX, which is the only size/resolution I'd think about reading PDFs on.
@sixty: have you updated the firmware?
That's nice, I was just wandering, because to me it seems that e-readers somehow only display "modified" pdfs or display them in a different manner than normal PCs (at least that was the impression I got from various pictures of e-readers displaying something).
There isn't really a market for cheap, slightly used ones, is it?
