Recent Blog Posts
-
Apple, Google Chip Away at BlackBerry's Market Lead
Feb 09 20102:45 pm EDT -
Google Challenges Facebook, Twitter
Feb 09 20107:30 am EDT -
iPad Impact on Wireless Network Raises Red Flag
Feb 08 20105:00 pm EDT -
McDermott Becomes First American to Lead SAP
Feb 08 201011:00 am EDT -
Surprise! Google Airs a Super Bowl Ad
Feb 08 20107:30 am EDT -
Microsoft Spends Billions to Take on Google
Feb 05 20101:40 pm EDT -
Olympic Rules on Social Media Confuse Athletes
Feb 05 201011:30 am EDT -
T-Mobile IPO Mulled
Feb 05 20107:30 am EDT -
Amazon-Macmillan Brawl Gets Even Nastier
Feb 04 20104:30 pm EDT -
Facebook Friends News Sites
Feb 04 201012:28 pm EDT
Links
- Engadget

- Pandora

- GigaOM

- USA TODAY Tech

- Todd Bishop's Microsoft Blog

- Somewhat Frank's tech conference list

- BuzzTracker Tech

- The Long Tail

- Tom Foremski

- Roger McGuinn's Folk Den

- John Battelle's SearchBlog

- Mark Cuban's blog

- SciTech Daily

- Romenesko

- Kevin Maney's site

- Steven Johnson

- Marc Andreessen

- TechCrunch

- Fred Wilson

- paidContent

- Spiedies, mmmm

Esquire, E-Ink: Future of Print?
Kevin Maney writes: Can't wait to see what the cover of Esquire's 75th anniversary issue looks like. I'd heard about this a month or so ago from an Esquire editor: This will be the world's first magazine cover to use E-Ink's technology, so the text and images on the page can actually change, flash, animate, whatever. It's extremely expensive at this point, so only 100,000 of 720,000 issues will be made with the E-Ink cover -- only for newsstand sales. (Subscribers, like me, get cut out of this deal!)
E-Ink makes the display technology for Amazon.com's Kindle. The company, which has been around for 11 years, has longed pressed the vision of "electronic print" -- a magazine or newspaper that looks and feels much like the original paper versions, except the pages are all E-Ink pages that can change. Pick up your E-Ink newspaper off the coffee table in the morning, and it will be updated with that day's edition via wireless networks. Pick it up an hour later, and breaking news will be refreshed.
Personally, I think it's a cool-sounding vision that will never happen. It will on something like a Kindle, but not in a form factor like a 100-page broadsheet newspaper. Still, E-Ink is probably going to play an interesting role in the future of print media. The Esquire experiment will be seen as a first step.
. □






