43
irex-building.jpg
Photo: the Irex Technologies building.

Eindhoven, in the South of the Netherlands, is Philips’ town. When Gerard Philips started his light bulb plant in 1891, the Netherlands was going through a patentless period. This meant that Thomas Edison could not secure a monopoly on light bulbs in the country, so that Philips, and the small town of Eindhoven could blossom. Soon the latter would turn into the country’s only boomtown.

In the South of Eindhoven is Philips’ “High Tech Campus”, formerly known as Natlab. Irex Technologies, makers of the E Ink based Iliad e-book reader, are housed here in a couple of rooms of a four story building.

I was welcomed by Willem Endhoven (press guy), Jan van de Kamer (founder, technical guy) and Angel Ancin (marketing). After a short introduction I was shown a working demo model of the Iliad.

The Iliad is a rugged device with a glass plate protecting the E Ink layer. According to Irex it was designed with normal usage in mind; you should be able to chuck it in your backpack without breaking the glass, but if you throw it at the wall, all bets are off. Jan van de Kamer joked: “You should be able to swat a fly with it, just like you would with a regular newspaper.” The tablet is pretty rigid, so that the glass plate won’t break when you try to bend it, and in order to further protect it the display is lower than the edge of the tablet.

iliad+hub-sm.jpg
Photo: the Irex Iliad and its travel hub.

The reason Irex use glass instead of plastic is because the latter is not quite waterproof, and water can damage the E Ink layer. But just because it has a glass plate does not mean you could drop it in the tub.

All Iliads will include a “travel-hub” which plugs into the bottom of the device. This travel-hub contains a socket for the power supply (also included), and both an RJ-45 (Ethernet) and USB port, so that you can use it both to recharge the built-in Lithium-Ion battery and to exchange files between the device and a PC. An additional cradle should eventually become available as an add-on.

iliad+zire.jpg
Photo: The eInk based Irex Iliad compared to an LCD-based Palm Zire.

The four metallic buttons at the front (bottom) of the device are used to access “content areas”. The round button top-right is used to try and synchronize the Iliad with the iRex Technologies Delivery Service (IDS) via the built-in wifi connection.

Typically you will select the document you wish to use by tapping the stylus onto the menu item or image representing the document, but you can also use the up and down arrows and bullet (bottom-left).

I thought the screen rendered slowly. The device seemed to take two seconds to render a new page; one to render it in memory, and the second to refresh the E Ink layer. When I compared this with Weasel Reader on my Palm, the difference was noticeable (from instantaneous to a wait). The Irex folks were a bit dismayed when I told them my opinion, and asked me to consider that this device should not be regarded as a computer, but as a competitor to paper; and just as it would take time to turn a paper page, so it takes time to “turn” a page on the Iliad.

I understand the sentiment, but the answer didn’t satisfy me. When asked why this is, I initially came up with the answer that I know there is a computer underneath all that paperness, and that I cannot unknow this. Once you know there is a computer, you expect computer-like speed.

iliad-control.png
Illustration: my guess of what a cross-section of the Iliad’s page flipping control looks like.

The long metalic bar on the left hand side of the front of the Iliad is used to leaf through a document. With your thumb you can push it left or right; push it left, and you will go the next page. Push it right, and you will go a page back.

I was surprised that “left” meant “forward,” having expected the opposite (and getting it wrong the first few times), but the explanation was simple; the movement of the bar is supposed to mimic the movement of a page. You turn a page from right to left to go to the next one, and from left to right to go back.

The Iliad uses “viewers” that are associated with file types. If you ask the device to open a PDF file, it will look for a PDF viewer. If it cannot find such a viewer, the device will try and contact the IDS to download an appropriate viewer.

Irex Technologies will provide the viewers for the most common formats, but will not make these themselves; the companies behind the formats are expected to deliver the viewers. For HTML and PDF, Irex produced viewers based on open source tools. For instance, the PDF viewer is based on xpdf.

Below are the rest of the photos I took. A second and third installment of this article are likely to follow after the weekend. In these I will discuss the questions you asked, the developer documentation (yes, Irex is considering to release this documentation to the public), and the challenges of making a device that shouldn’t look (and work) like a device, but like paper.

Edit: meanwhile, two follow-up articles have appeared: Your questions to Irex Technologies (26 March 2006) and Irex Iliad and the e-paper paradigm (8 April 2006).

iliad_bottom-sm.jpg
Photo: The bottom of the Iliad; from left to right a stereo headphone connection, the port for the cradle/travel-hub and the on/off switch.

iliad_top-sm.jpg
Photo: The top of the Iliad.

iliad_back-sm.jpg
Photo: The back of the Iliad with the stylus slightly pulled out, and what looks like a small speaker.

iliad-detail.jpg
Photo: A viewer program can control both the hard- and software buttons.

iliad-detail2.jpg
Photo: The software buttons. A viewer program can control these, but cannot change or delete them.

iliad-travel_hub.jpg
Photo: A close-up of the Iliad travel-hub, which is supplied with each device. The charger displayed has a generic power-plug; the actual power-plug will be mounted on top of this and will of course be different per country.

 
43