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mrcurly

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Moving on from the 3D, Cloud , NFC, Marijuana etc....trends, what do people think will be the next big money maker for the domainer?

I have a few Big Data domains but I like my hand in several dishes so if anyone would like to share their thoughts I'm sure a lot of domainers would appreciate any insights to what's gonna be hot or not.

Cheers

Stu
 
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internetofhealth.com
 
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Color eReaders com

not on market yet, but will come soon
 
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Color eReaders com

not on market yet, but will come soon
I think they're already on the market, called tablets (iPad/Nexus/etc.)...
 
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Sorry.. error on my Browser repeated post
 
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Sorry.. error on my browser repeated post
 
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modular smart watch :) is a Trend
 
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I think they're already on the market, called tablets (iPad/Nexus/etc.)...


There are not !!! calling the tablet eReader is like calling hot air balloon an airplane. Yes you can fly by both.

e-book readers are better readability of their screens, especially in bright sunlight, and longer battery life. This is achieved by using electronic paper ( or e- ink) technology to display content to readers.

the principal main difference between eReader and tablet is the fact tablet is shining, eReader is not, its like paper - natural reading.

so I am mentioning the real eReaders in color, which are not on market yet for sure, but will come soon or later, and then, it will be even more massive boom on ebooks market than compering today , when we have just black and white eReaders.
 
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info:

Whatever Happened to the Color eReader?

March 4, 2012 by Andy Patrizio Reads (6,755)

  • With the breakout success of the Amazon Kindle, eReaders finally came of age with a success story. It took the breakthrough technology of E Ink Holdings, makers of eInk or ePaper displays, which were readable in sunlight and consumed minimal power to make them appealing, and other technological advances to make them affordable.

The next move everyone expected was for a color eReader. The Kindle, Barnes & Noble NOOK, Sony Reader and others are all monochrome and fine for reading a plain text book but not so good for color publications, like reference books, cookbooks, scholastic text books, and glossy magazines.


E Ink Holdings announced a color display in 2010, the Triton, which won the Display Component of the Year from the Society of Information Displays voting committee at the SID 2011 show.

And then… nothing. While the first color eReaders based on the competing, but still similar, Qualcomm mirasol display technology were announced from China (pictured) in January, instead of color eReaders, the US saw the release of the NOOK Color, Kindle Fire, and NOOK Tablet, which had color displays using LCD screens instead of eInk.


Color eInk in EducationSo what happened? Sri Peruvemba, CMO of E Ink, said color eReaders have gotten off to a good start… In education/text books.

“We knew the first generation of color products we launched would only have application in the text book space and not general purpose eReader space,” he said. “eReaders are all for leisure reading, not for textbooks. [Triton eReaders] are in production and shipping, but it’s targeting a market that doesn’t quite exist yet.”

Peruvemba said education is a new market for eReaders, but he is convinced “every text book will all be replaced by some type of electronic media at some point in the future. It makes perfect sense.” Already he knows of 10 companies making efforts to build and deploy eReaders to school children, especially in the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) nations.

LCD Glut
That’s true, notes Jon Peddie, president of the graphics market research firm Jon Peddie Research, but it’s also a very price sensitive market. The Indian government, he said, wants tablets for students that cost just $35.

“If E Ink can get the price down to LCD levels they have a chance, but there’s a glut of LCD screens out there. If you can make them small, the yields tend to go up. So they have a hell of a battle to compete on price against LCDs,” he said.

There will also be improvements in eReaders as semiconductor makers get into the business. In the beginning, E Ink made its own chips to power the eReader because the industry didn’t see the potential. With the success of the Kindle and NOOK, semiconductor makers have gotten religion.

Though slow display refresh rates have limited eInk-based eReaders as text-only devices, Freescale has a system-on-a-chip (SoC) running video on monochrome E Ink screens. Qualcomm’s mirasol eReader, the Hanvon C18, supports video with Qualcomm’s own Snapdragon chip. Texas Instruments also has a SoC with a software display controller running video, while Marvell has demoed some fast motion products and Epson is also making progress on eReader chips.

For now, Peruvemba thinks Triton is suitable for the education market because they don’t need the bright color or motion video required for consumer tablets that show video and high resolution photos.

“I’m sure once we get to the next generation of color display and then the third generation displays get launched, you will see general purpose eReader markets go with that type of a product. For now, monochrome meets the needs and requirements for eReaders,” he said.
 
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Next big trend that few even can realize but it will just popup out of no where and everyone will be caught off guard is affordable private satellites. Remember 3D printing has been around for a long time, back in the day a rapid prototyping machiine would run 500k, same with drones and even computer and aircraft.

I can go on and on about the many cool things that can happen as satellite tech becomes more affordable. I am telling you guys it will just be from one day to another.
 
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info:

Whatever Happened to the Color eReader?

March 4, 2012 by Andy Patrizio Reads (6,755)

  • With the breakout success of the Amazon Kindle, eReaders finally came of age with a success story. It took the breakthrough technology of E Ink Holdings, makers of eInk or ePaper displays, which were readable in sunlight and consumed minimal power to make them appealing, and other technological advances to make them affordable.

The next move everyone expected was for a color eReader. The Kindle, Barnes & Noble NOOK, Sony Reader and others are all monochrome and fine for reading a plain text book but not so good for color publications, like reference books, cookbooks, scholastic text books, and glossy magazines.


E Ink Holdings announced a color display in 2010, the Triton, which won the Display Component of the Year from the Society of Information Displays voting committee at the SID 2011 show.

And then… nothing. While the first color eReaders based on the competing, but still similar, Qualcomm mirasol display technology were announced from China (pictured) in January, instead of color eReaders, the US saw the release of the NOOK Color, Kindle Fire, and NOOK Tablet, which had color displays using LCD screens instead of eInk.


Color eInk in EducationSo what happened? Sri Peruvemba, CMO of E Ink, said color eReaders have gotten off to a good start… In education/text books.

“We knew the first generation of color products we launched would only have application in the text book space and not general purpose eReader space,” he said. “eReaders are all for leisure reading, not for textbooks. [Triton eReaders] are in production and shipping, but it’s targeting a market that doesn’t quite exist yet.”

Peruvemba said education is a new market for eReaders, but he is convinced “every text book will all be replaced by some type of electronic media at some point in the future. It makes perfect sense.” Already he knows of 10 companies making efforts to build and deploy eReaders to school children, especially in the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) nations.

LCD Glut
That’s true, notes Jon Peddie, president of the graphics market research firm Jon Peddie Research, but it’s also a very price sensitive market. The Indian government, he said, wants tablets for students that cost just $35.

“If E Ink can get the price down to LCD levels they have a chance, but there’s a glut of LCD screens out there. If you can make them small, the yields tend to go up. So they have a hell of a battle to compete on price against LCDs,” he said.

There will also be improvements in eReaders as semiconductor makers get into the business. In the beginning, E Ink made its own chips to power the eReader because the industry didn’t see the potential. With the success of the Kindle and NOOK, semiconductor makers have gotten religion.

Though slow display refresh rates have limited eInk-based eReaders as text-only devices, Freescale has a system-on-a-chip (SoC) running video on monochrome E Ink screens. Qualcomm’s mirasol eReader, the Hanvon C18, supports video with Qualcomm’s own Snapdragon chip. Texas Instruments also has a SoC with a software display controller running video, while Marvell has demoed some fast motion products and Epson is also making progress on eReader chips.

For now, Peruvemba thinks Triton is suitable for the education market because they don’t need the bright color or motion video required for consumer tablets that show video and high resolution photos.

“I’m sure once we get to the next generation of color display and then the third generation displays get launched, you will see general purpose eReader markets go with that type of a product. For now, monochrome meets the needs and requirements for eReaders,” he said.


true , but Tablet IS Not eReader , and it does not mean it will not finally come
 
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quantifiedselfer com
quantifiedselfers com
quantified co.uk

Meet the Quantified Selfers: From heart rates to happiness, there is little this fast-growing, self-tracking community won't monitor

(independent)
 
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