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Making books obsolete

On the Sony Reader, you can turn the pages, download books8212;without using electricity

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The market for downloadable books will grow by 400 percent in each of the next two years, to over 25 billion by 2008,8221; predicted the keynote speaker at the 2001 Women8217;s National Book Association meeting. Whoops. The great e-book fantasy burst shortly after that speech, along with the rest of the dot-com bubble.

In 2003, Barnes 038; Noble shut its e-book store, Palm sold its e-book business to a website and most people left the whole idea for dead. Not everybody, however. Some die-hards at Sony still believe that, properly designed, the e-book has a future. Their solution is the Sony Reader, a small, sleek, portable screen that will be introduced this month.

It8217;s a handsome half-inch-thick nine-ounce slab, a bit smaller than 5 inches by 7 inches, 8220;bound8221; in a protective leatherette cover. You can turn pages individually, or jump ahead 10 percent of the book at a time. A 8220;mark8221; button produces a visual dog-ear on the page corner.

What distinguishes Sony8217;s effort from all the failed e-book readers of years gone by, however, is the screen. The Reader employs a remarkable new display technology from a company called E Ink. Sandwiched between layers of plastic film are millions of transparent, nearly microscopic liquid-filled spheres. White and black particles float inside them, as though inside the world8217;s tiniest snow globes. Depending on how the electrical charge is applied to the plastic film, either the black or white particles rise to the top of the little spheres, forming crisp patterns of black and white.

The result looks like ink on light gray paper. The 8220;ink8221; is so close to the surface of the screen, it looks as if it8217;s been printed there. The reading experience is pleasant, natural and nothing like reading a computer screen. There8217;s no backlight, however; you can read only by ambient light. Sony would probably argue that this trait makes the Reader even more like a traditional book, but it also means that you can8217;t read in bed with the lights off, as you can with a laptop or palmtop.

The only time the Reader uses electricity, in fact, is when you actually turn a page. One charge is good for 7,500 page turns. That8217;s enough power to get you through The Da Vinci Code 16 times electrical power, anyway. You can recharge the battery either from its power cord or from a computer8217;s USB jack.

The Reader can also display digital photos8212;they look surprisingly good, considering they8217;re being depicted using only four shades of gray8212;and play music files through headphones. With a good deal of preparation, you could even read along as the same audio book plays.

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There are two ways to load up the Reader. You can copy your texts, photos and music to a memory card Memory Stick or SD, which goes into a slot on the left side. That8217;s also how you can expand the Reader8217;s built-in storage 64 megabytes, enough for 80 books.

The other option is to import files into a somewhat buggy Windows program called Sony Connect. It8217;s the home base for the Reader in much the way iTunes is the home base for the iPod, although Sony Connect requires you to drag files manually; it doesn8217;t offer automatic synchronising with the Reader.

The Sony Reader has a few kinks to be ironed out. Like an Etch A Sketch, the Reader8217;s screen has to wipe away each page before drawing the next one. Unfortunately, the result is a one-second white-black-white blink that quickly becomes annoying.

Sony has dreamed up some fairly baffling controls, too8212;not an easy feat on what should be a very simple machine. For example, the next/previous page buttons are at 2 and 8 o8217;clock on a dime-size desk. A circular control might make sense if it had buttons at all four points of the compass8212;but only two? There8217;s no search function, video or clickable links, either. So much for those key e-book advantages.

8212;New York Times / DAVID POGUE

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