Typing on one of these screens isn't that fun. Clarity isn't so good and the refresh rate is bad. Want to select some text? It's a nightmare. Cursors are barely possible. Many of the ways we've come to expect to interact with computers are not possible even on a touchscreen e-paper display. And I'm a fan!
E-paper just doesn't seem ready for that type of application right now. It's for displaying big pieces of text - not interacting with text, not showing images, not writing on, nothing. Its primary purpose, which it is fulfilling pretty well actually, is showing a page full of words. It's not very well suited to anything else.
If the technology improves (primarily in contrast and refresh rate) I'm with you - but for now, it's not a good option.
eInk is very slow refresh, about a second...not fun for a laptop. Pixel Qi displays work better: have TFT-speed refresh with sun-light readability. Indoors its a color display. Outdoors you can turn off the backlight to conserve power.
If your computer/laptop has VGA/HDMI or composite out you can use our Pixel Qi+Controller kit http://www.adafruit.com/products/1303 for modern laptops with a 40 pin LVDS cable you can just do a swap out as long as the screen's the same dimensions.
Out of curiosity and because i am too lazy to pretend i want some and request a quote from the vendor, does anybody know what is a ballpark figure for the cost of those displays?
So far, $250 for the 7.4" "EVAL" kit (from pervasive displays). A heck of a lot more reasonable than the last time I looked at e-ink screens ($10,000 for a single 6" dev kit). I'm not quite sure I grasp what it includes, but it sounds fairly barebone:
>The 7.4” EVAL kit includes the 7.4” EPD panel, a timing controller, a pattern generator and interconnect cables
Doesnt look like this supports displays larger then a couple inches. I would love to get a largish e-ink display so I could code outside (slow refresh rate is fine, just needs to support a terminal).
Anyhow, is a step in the right direction to have small hackable eink displays.
I noticed that there was a 10.2" display on the PDI website. It looks like it's not supported by the current prototyping kits, but I am hoping that will change down the road; I'd love to hack around with something that big!
On the other hand, it could be a fun challenge to try to integrate a bunch of the smaller displays into a single large one--though I imagine the novelty of coding on something like that would wear off pretty quickly ~wry grin~
Thanks! That link color doesn't show up well on my display; didn't realize PDI was a vendor rather than an industry spec of some kind. This is what I needed.
I worked with Visionect to create an interactive menu using their ePaper Development Kit[1]. The ePaper technology itself has refresh speed limitations, but great resolution & power-saving advantages. Their SDK exposes a JavaScript API for handling display refresh, which was easy to implement in Backbone.js render methods. You should try this if you want to build an MVC App[2] on an ePaper device.
Looks pretty neat. I can't find it on their site, but will this work with Raspberry Pi? I presume so, but it's not listed under their fully supported list.
It will, but they don't provide code examples. This display is interfaced via a SPI connection, and the RPi has one SPI bus (see: http://elinux.org/RPi_SPI). I expect that a community driver will be written presently now that there are eyeballs on this project.
So far it has been really hard buying E-paper displays as a hobbyist, with Sparkfun[1] being the only easy option. Crap, scrape that... it has been retired.
I once tried to get some people together and make a kit[2], but that project never went anywhere.
I've had a few things I've wanted to do with ePaper but have never found a decent development kit -- everything I found when I searched last year was along the lines of a small, thin strip. No big panels like you'd find in a Kindle.
I have always wanted a e-Ink display connected to my iPhone, perhaps now we can make one ourselves! Interested helping me out? please email me at giovanni dot donelli at gmail
They were working on some interesting stuff at Bridgestone of all places, called Aerobee, but that was two years ago.. it's not profitable when there are only a couple big buyers of the things and you don't make much margin since they're all budget devices. I think the tech will stay around in a low key way until a major breakthrough, and you'll hear about it.
> If the history of the Internet has proven anything, it is that open technologies lead to unbounded innovation and unprecedented value added to the entire economy.
When has that been true for hardware? It seems to me that the most exciting hardware innovations have been proprietary models.
Qualcom has been working on Mirasol [0], an alternative to ePaper for a long time now. I saw it 4 years ago at Mobile World Congress and it really looks nice. Full colour screens and the more light you pump in, the better it looks.
Sadly, so far they are nowhere near a commercial rollout.
[0]: http://www.pervasivedisplays.com/products/panels