(C) BoingBoing This story was originally published by BoingBoing and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . Boox Palma is a smartphone-sized e-ink e-reader [1] ['Rob Beschizza'] Date: 2024-06-25 Kindles have gotten bigger over time, and at the cutting edge compete with A4-sized e-ink beasts like the reMarkable 2 tablet. But what if we go smaller? The Boox Palma is a suprisingly enticing smartphone-sized device, and David Pierce loves it. E-ink's refresh rate makes it accidentally good as a focus/minimalist/dumb gadget that yet has all the bells and whistles of Android. The slow, monochrome screen poisons dopamine-tickling apps, but is perfect for the thing it was meant for, reading. Photo: Boox In a couple of months of using the Palma, a $280 device that has been on sale since last fall, that combination has turned out to be exactly what I needed. Because it's smartphone-sized, with a 6.1-inch screen and an overall footprint just a smidge larger than the Samsung Galaxy S24 Plus, I can hold it in one hand and fit in my pocket. Because it runs Android, I can download any app I need. And because it's E Ink, the battery lasts somewhere between four days and a week, the screen is easy to look at even in the dark, and — and this is the most important part — most apps are just awful to use. There are drawbacks. The cut of Android is old. It's plasticky. It's not a phone, which might be desirable in the abstract but means there's probably going to have to be a phone in the same pocket next to it. Has anyone tried one of these? [END] --- [1] Url: https://boingboing.net/2024/06/25/boox-palma-is-a-smartphone-sized-e-ink-e-reader.html Published and (C) by BoingBoing Content appears here under this condition or license: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0. via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds: gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/boingboing/