Boox’s new e-reader could replace your Kindle, Kobo, and digital notepad by Andrew Liszewski
Boox has announced a new version of its smallest e-reader that expands the Go 6’s functionality to now include note-taking. The new Go 6 (Gen II) sticks with a 6-inch, 300PPI E Ink screen like its predecessor but gets a bump from 2GB to 3GB of RAM and now supports Boox’s InkSense Plus stylus, which can be used for sketching, annotating documents, or making handwritten notes.
I guess I have made my peace with the fact that I can not make these e-readers (including my Kindle Paperwhite) work. I am mostly reading books borrowed from my library and that does not work with these devices.
It is mentioned as something that could come in the future, but, it is not out yet.
Anyway the places where I do my reading are -
- Listening to audiobooks while driving
- Listening to audiobooks while walking
- Reading ebook on my phone while on my lunch break
- Reading on my iPad during the weekends - perhaps a chapter or two while Savya sleeps
I don’t see a space for an e-reader here. Maybe I could replace my phone with a Palma, but what’s the point. I don’t want to carry another device.
This even smaller credit card-sized e-reader has one tragic flaw by Andrew Liszewski
I was thrilled to find the X3 fits perfectly on the back of my iPhone 16 Pro, and then once again disappointed to discover its magnets aren’t strong enough to keep it securely in place. Magnetic accessories like PopSockets or the OhSnap Snap Grip have a satisfying “thunk” when attaching them to your phone. Attaching the X3 to my 16 Pro feels more like the devices are exchanging a weak hug. They don’t remain aligned when holding the two together, and on several occasions the X3 fell off my phone while being inserted or removed from a pocket.
I want to buy a phone sized device which can help me read. The problem is what I read. Not just books. I Use RSS to read from the web. That, is the missing component in this and all the other devices like this.
But damn is it tempting.
Same and Different
If the future of e-readers is getting weird, I’m here for it by
If I were Xteink or any similar hardware developer, I’d be looking hard at giving support to the CrossPoint project and then focusing my efforts on making a device with simpler controls (fewer buttons!). Adding lighting and potentially a touchscreen would make this interesting, too. There are a lot of directions this sort of product could go—so let’s get to experimenting.
I was similarly looking at this device. I had seen it somewhere on threads and thought this looked cool.
But then I looked at the feature set and given that most of my reading is happening via the e-library app. It did not make sense.