Yota Phone Launches With Secondary E-Ink Display 72
OldJuke writes "Called the YotaPhone, the device pairs a traditional LCD color touch-screen on one side with a black-and-white, electronic-paper display on the other, allowing users to continuously view data in real time without having to constantly wake up their phones and drain their batteries. General interaction will be done through the LCD screen, but the e-paper display allows an image to be displayed at all times — from maps, airline boarding passes and family photos to Twitter messages and emails — but only uses power when the picture changes. BBC News interviewed the company's leader, Vlad Martynov, for a hands-on demonstration."
Finally! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Finally! (Score:5, Interesting)
Plus touch (Score:1)
I want both the things you ask for and:
Touch screen also needs to be on the eInk side too. As it currently is, you do swipe gestures below the screen to operate it, which makes it not good for lots of things.
(Also nice to have, ditch the Google part of Android and gives us a clean Android install. My wife just flipped when I told her what she'd been watching on Youtube on her Android tablet. She never realized it records everything you do and associates it with the Google account).
Re:Plus touch (Score:5, Informative)
"Also nice to have, ditch the Google part of Android and gives us a clean Android install."
I'm not even going to comment on how dumb this is, I think it speaks for itself. Want to ditch the Microsoft part of Windows while you're at it?
Re:Plus touch (Score:4, Funny)
"Also nice to have, ditch the Google part of Android and gives us a clean Android install."
I'm not even going to comment on how dumb this is, I think it speaks for itself. Want to ditch the Microsoft part of Windows while you're at it?
There's a quick and easy command to do that: mkfs /dev/sda1
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There's a quick and easy command to do that: mkfs /dev/sda1
Well, except that with the (censored) way they ship phones, you'd need to root it first.
Say what you will about WIndows; at least there you have an option to remove the bloatware. On Android you're stuck with it for life.
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Consumer demand.
At the saving of battery life and natural non back-lighting you loose refresh speed, and brightness of the device, and the ability to use it in the dark without some external light shining on it.
We have the Kindle and the Kindle Fire. One with ePaper and one with an LCD display. The Kindle is only for reading, the Kindle Fire is for much more.
When given an option people usually choose more.
In countries such as Korea and China, battery life may be more necessity over more features.
Also compan
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Mod parent +1 Condescending Twat
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After doing some googling it looks like they stopped production and development last year because they were too expensive.
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The backlighting can be solved just like the backlit eink Nook and Kindles.
Kindles are front lit, aren't they?
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Similar idea to the Entourage eDGe. I thought these had fallen by the wayside (about two weeks after I bought one, incidentally) but at least the Wikipedia entry [wikipedia.org] doesn't mention that they've gone out of business.
Thus: Smart Watch (Score:2)
Smart Watches are meant to fill the same function, and some (like the Pebble) use e-Ink.
Myself, I don't find the battery drain for turning on the screen a moment significant enough to matter.
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There are applications where you'll want to view the same image for a long time, like a map or a book. Both uses stand out in my mind because I just did a lot of traveling, where I couldn't be certain of when I'd next get a chance to plug in my phone. I'd have to flash it on to glance at a map, then shut it off and walk some more.
(Not to mention that I'd have to unlock it each time, a slightly cumbersome procedure while walking, though that seems a problem that could be solved with suitable programming.)
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I've been asking for one of these for years.
So why didn't you just buy one years ago [wikipedia.org]?
You could have had not only an e-ink display, but a battery life of over a week, and you could not only drop it on the ground but run over it a few times with a pickup truck without damaging it. All for under $50 in the USA, and that's only because it was marked up as an import.
The only down side is that you would have an actual phone used for talking to other people with phones, rather than disgruntled avian simulator. Some folks consider that to be a problem.
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The Yota will let you display a map, a book, or other useful stuff on its e-ink display.
The Fone apparently couldn't even display SMS messages properly.
Sorry if I missed a joke, but if you're serious, there's no comparison.
If someone made a phone like the Yota in a slider format (or some other way to get a keyboard in
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You complained about battery life, said that the e-ink display was a better option, and implied that you had been waiting years for a device which could provide both.
If your other requirements were just viewing maps or reading books then you didn't need to wait so many years, as you could have fulfilled those needs with an Android powered ereader like the Sony PRS-T1 back in 2011.
If, on the other hand, you have been waiting years for a smartphone with two 4.3" displays, a 1.7 GHz Krait CPU, 2GB of RAM, 32
Moto Fone (Score:2)
Motorola had made one - and it was dirt cheap - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_Fone [wikipedia.org]
It was around 30$ without a contract if I remember correctly.
Durability? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Durability? (Score:4, Informative)
When was the last time you found a cellphone case that wasn't custom shaped for the phone? It's not like they have uniform physical characteristics.
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How many of them are clear on the back? Normal style cases wouldn't do the trick for this phone.
...huh? the point was that NO PHONE takes any cover made for any other phone*. so of course the covers would be made for it. there is no universal cases that fit nowadays.
furthermore, most android phones from random manufactures go without their cases and last just fine, it's pretty much only apple who designs their phones so that they look pretty in pictures but need a plastic cover when in use. from the pictures this doesn't look like a phone you'd want to stick in a cover anyhow.
*iphone4s being an except
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How many of them are clear on the back? Normal style cases wouldn't do the trick for this phone.
There are a number of Nexus 5 cases that are clear on the back, and it doesn't even have a rear display: http://amzn.to/1cZ1rYN [amzn.to]
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A phone should not need a case (Score:3)
Cases are for iPhones and similarly fragile design statements - a phone should not need one. This does put some constraints on the freedom the designers have - no glass to the edge, a buffer zone between fragile materials and the casing (which should not be made of a fragile material), etc. As the phone is first and foremost a tool this is not an unreasonable restriction.
We use Motorola Defy [wikipedia.org] phones here on the farm. They seem to survive just fine without needing a case. They look rather similar to most touc
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I used a G'Zone for years (mil-spec flip phone). Bought it specifically because I know I drop my phones a lot. not very feature-ful (but it was 6 years ago), but it took a licking and kept on ticking.
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I've dropped my Kyocera more than once and it's never broken. A case? If it was in a protective case it wouldn't fit in my pocket. As it only cost a hundred bucks with no subsidy, if it does break I'll just buy a new one.
What kind of cheap but expensive phone do you have that is so delicate?
Yota phone? (Score:4, Funny)
Shouldn't the headline read: "With Secondary E-Ink Display YOTA Phone Launches"
"Smart phone wars begun they have."
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--YOTA, YOTA, YOTA.
Ooops! Got it frozen with compromising display... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Given the average update frequency and lack of greyscaling, I don't think anyone's going to be watching pr0n on these.
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Spoken like somebody who wasn't introduced to digital porn until after 1995.
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That's where you're wrong. Move with the times.
Best/worst inevitable feature (Score:5, Funny)
It kills the battery but oh! the conversations you'll strike up on the subway!
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Good idea for tickets (Score:2)
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Really? I've only ever tried this once, at Bristol international airport, but the scanner read off my LCD screen just fine.
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I've used barcodes on my phone at the theater multiple times just fine and I haven't messed with my brightness settings on my phone. The one time I saw that it didn't work, the guy said he tried to scan it in the wrong part of ordering, so nothing was happening. He started the transaction over and it scanned fine. I wouldn't be surprised if some people have phones with weird screens or screen protectors that mess with the reading of the barcode, though.
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Except in Aberdeen, Scotland, it works but they insist on a printed copy...
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I've never had a problem checking in with first my N900 and now the Nexus4.
Except in Aberdeen, Scotland, it works but they insist on a printed copy...
Of course - a TRUE Scotsman would demand the paper ticket, because that paper can be used for notes, or toilet paper, or starting a fire later on. Why turn down that free piece of paper? You paid for it after all!
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Nokia Glance (Score:2)
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One of the many features from my old Nokia that I miss. *sigh*
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The middle?
Awesome tool for show-offs (Score:1)
Sweet! (Score:2)
Pixel Qi? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, why don't many more devices use the Pixel Qi display? You know, the one that's a normal color LCD when backlit, or a monochrome very-low-power LCD when front-lit (ie, by ambient lighting). Seems like it would be ideal for phones and smart watches.