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Juice BoxBranko Collin‘s inquiring mind wanted to know. Could you use a Mattel Juice Box to read e-books? In the wake of a Slashdot item, he wrote me:

Some company called Target is selling these for 12 US$. With a 2.75 inch 240×160 color LCD spatial and colour resolution is better than that of my Palm Zire (160×160 with some greys), which I use for reading ebooks. [Links added.]

Well, according to Chris Smith, a poster to the eBook Community list, the answer to the “Can you?” question is a big Yes, just so you also buy an MP3/JPEG kit. “I downloaded JPEGbook, and used it to convert Cory Doctorow’s Eastern Standard Tribe to a JPEG sequence at 240×160. This would be directly loadable on an MP3/jpeg kit equipped Juice Box.” According to Smith, “at 12 MB for E.S.T., you might get about 40 novels on a 512 MB MMC card.”

Further thoughts from anyone? Does this actually work on a real-life Juice Box? Meanwhile you’d better find a Juice Box on sale since the usual price would be at least $40-$50–in fact, almost $70 at some places. Here’s the “Buy It Now” lowdown from eBay. Oh, and now some more links.

But what about the larger meaning of all this? If nothing else, the Juice Box shows how much the price of the technology, including LCDs, has come down–and how we really could see $25 e-book readers someday, maybe sooner than we think. What’s more, I’m intrigued by one of Chris Smith’s statements: “I checked, and people have been able to load their own ROM images on this device. It is not beyond possibility that someone could write an ebook reader for it.” Hmm. OpenReader someday on a future version of a Mattel Juice Box? Cool! Imagine the possibilities for libraries and individual consumers alike.

No, Juice Boxes wouldn’t be perfect e-book readers. But less-than-optimal reading of a much-desired book is better than no book at all.

 
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