TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics
November 15th, 2009

Samsung and Iriver Story first impressions – direct from Korea

By a TeleRead Contributor

Editor’s Note: another user contribution today, great! This time it’s from Justin Loutsch who reports from South Korea. Paul Biba

Hi there,

I’m in South Korea, and figured I’d go check out the Iriver Story at the only bookstore that sells it and then tell you guys a bit more about it. Feel free to pick and choose what you want to post. I also found the Samsung papyrus there, but didn’t spend a whole lot of time with it.

First, the Story:

dscn1247.jpgI was very impressed with the size of the screen (I currently have a sony PRS 300) and the keyboard is great. It has a search function, something I would love to have to help me find my place or find specific words. I tried it out, but it started typing in Korean and I didn’t know how to change the language interface.
There is a dedicated button to take you to your library, which I now think is kind of neat but I’m not sure how needed it is. The only use I can see for it is switching between many books while reading, which I would hate doing.

I had the text set to the largest setting in the pictures I took, it has 3 settings just like the sony reader. Turning the pages takes about the same amount of time as the Sony, and can be done from either the arrow keys or on either side of the bottom of the device. On the left and right side you see black slits. Above and below each slit are symbols that you can click to turn the page with either hand, however I found that it took a considerable amount of pressure to do this and it was easier to do the closer to the slits you press it.

The spacebar allows you to change the layout of the book as you read it, from portrait to landscape and back (that is the symbol you see in the bottom right corner of the spacebar). It was already in the book-like case (which I felt was a hindrance) so I couldn’t just pick it up and hold the device freely, but from what I was able to do it felt very light and easy to hold. However it is very creaky, as if the parts are not together very tightly. Sorry I didn’t get any pics of this, but the SD card slot and usb port are on the bottom of the device, and they have a cover about 1.5 inches long which is connected to the device by a little rubber cord. I felt that I would be annoyed greatly by having to pull this thing out to plug in the device and then replace it when done.
My main impressions are that I like it because of the screen size and the search feature and keyboard, as well as the SD card slot. It also seems to do all the main file formats. I hear the major korean publishers are going to work some deals with them, but I don’t know what will happen for the English speaking users (or others) when iRiver begins to market the device internationally.
According to your site, it will cost between $282 and $323 (I couldn’t ask about the price and there were no signs with that info) and at that price it most likely won’t beat the kindle as long as it has no wifi or other means of downloading books wirelessly. I think mainly it has the other features of the kindle while managing to be more open.

images.jpegThe Samsung: I found the model shown in this article: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124869467457883521.html I couldn’t stand using this thing. It has only 2 buttons on the entire device, left and right arrows. I tried touching the screen and nothing happened. I looked more carefully and there was a stylus dangling from a cord below it, but it wasn’t obvious that that is what I would need to use the device. I tapped an entry once and it opened the book, and I found the display to be annoying here too. I think the buttons at the top (back/forward arrows, home button, etc) really take away from the reading immersion experience, not to mention screen space. I hated it and put it down almost immediately.

I hope you find some of this info useful!

Digg us. Slashdot us. Facebook us. Twitter us. Share the news.
  • Digg
  • Slashdot
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • NewsVine
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace
  • Suggest to Techmeme via Twitter
  • Netvibes
  • PDF

3 Responses to “Samsung and Iriver Story first impressions – direct from Korea”

  1. Thanks for the info – it’s great to see hands on experience with devices. Tangentially, I thought it was a bit of “humour noir” that the samsung link via the wsj was useless because of Murdoch’s paywall ;-)

  2. Sorry about that Mark, I was trying to find a good picture of it in a short amount of time, and that was one of the first links google came up with.

  3. Iriver story, general problems:

    Most of mine ebooks are pdf, and if I can use reflow on them it really works nice, but there are really big problems.

    Problems to consider:

    1. The Zoom with the four steps, should be possible to customize in settings, so I would be able to have it on medium/sec.medium/high as my own customized standard.

    2. Zoom in both versions does not work in landscape mode. Why?

    3. The corner Zoom has to be easier in functionality, (sorry but to 80es software engineer loves his idea)

    4. When I have a book on my SD card and read in it, the Story does not save my Reflow and Zoom settings, this means that i every time I read a book from my SD card have to inter the settings once more. (sorry but that’s really crappy)

    5. Why does the Story not recognize any book in the book section when i only have my books on a SD card, should recognize them. (have my books on diffrent SD cards, categorized)
    This means that each time re-inter another SD card it shall remember where i was in the book and what Reflow/zoom i had, otherwise it wont be real to call it an expansion possibility.

    6. The Reflow display some pdf, very weird, exampled under:

    Fred is fat and lives in a shel
    ter while eating fish with his toes, and usually he sleeps with fresh herring under his pillow.
    Unfortunate for the other resi
    dents in the shelter, he is resisting any fish related arguments.

    So it breaks the lines in some words, this is really not acceptable, please fix it.

    7. Must agree with critics that it is cheap not to deliver a cover with the story.

    8. There should be a possibility to set the story, to re-inter directly into the book you just read last time, so you dont have to g0 through the menu every time.

    9. I can not bookmark pages in pdf’s.

    10. Recent book, should be resent books, if you are reading several at the time.

Leave a Reply

Subscribe without commenting