MacNN | Vizplex News http://www.macnn.com/ MacNN is the leading source for news about Apple and the Mac industry. It offers news, reviews, discussion, tips, troubleshooting, links, and reviews every day. The best place for Mac News. Period. en-us Vizplex, Latest News, Headlines, Stories; http://images.macnn.com/images/macnn-logo-bw.gif http://www.macnn.com/ Dulin's Books launches two e-book readers in the US http://www.macnn.com/articles/09/11/09/dulins.books.outs.e.book.readers.promises.more/ <img align='left' src='http://photos.macnn.com/news/0911/pocket360in.jpg' border='0' width='176' height='120' />Dulin's Books recently announced the arrival of the PocketBook 301 and the PocketBook 360 e-book readers in the US. Both devices are rebadged, as Dulin's Books is a reseller not a manufacturer, but are relatively advanced for the class. The PocketBook 360 has a 5-inch E-Ink Vizplex display and is powered by a 400MHz Samsung processor, while its 512MB of built-in memory can be expanded to 32GB than... http://www.macnn.com/articles/09/11/09/dulins.books.outs.e.book.readers.promises.more/ Mon, 09 Nov 2009 20:00:00 GMT Foxit gets into hardware with eSlick e-book reader http://www.macnn.com/articles/08/12/19/foxit.eslick.e.book.reader/ <img align='left' src='http://images.macnn.com/esta/content/0812/eslick.jpg' border='0' width='176' height='120' />Software maker Foxit has recently announced the upcoming release of its first hardware product, the eSlick e-book reader. The device supports PDF and TXT documents, and includes Foxit Reader Pro Pack and Foxit PDF Creator software that will convert any printable document to a PDF. Its 128MB of embedded memory will also hold MP3 files, and is expandable to 4GB via an SD card slot. A 2GB SD card is ... http://www.macnn.com/articles/08/12/19/foxit.eslick.e.book.reader/ Fri, 19 Dec 2008 21:00:00 GMT HP shows flexible plastic TFT displays http://www.macnn.com/articles/08/12/08/hp.flexible.tft.displays/ <img align='left' src='http://images.macnn.com/esta/content/0812/hpflexibledisplay.jpg' border='0' width='176' height='120' />HP Labs and Arizona State University today revealed that it has built the first example of a working flexible plastic display. A process known as self-aligned imprint lithography (SAIL) lets the PC maker build a thin film transistor screen that can be rolled up without snapping or otherwise easily breaking. Although it uses an active matrix and can show moving content, it also uses Vizplex's E I... http://www.macnn.com/articles/08/12/08/hp.flexible.tft.displays/ Mon, 08 Dec 2008 19:15:00 GMT