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  • dleeftink 1 hours

    > Don’t make yourself regret the things you didn’t do

    Nothing to add, but it bears repeating. A shimmer of indie tech resilience

  • mikeweiss 24 minutes

    This paired with LLMs....Looks like we'll have harry potter magic portraits soon! You could have a conversation with a portrait on your wall....

  • MrPapz 49 minutes

    The Crowd Supply website mentions the high power consumption but it would be great if I could connect it to a smartphone to work on the go!

  • jackb4040 2 hours

    Between this, the Daylight computer (I know it's RLCD), and some of the flagship Boox devices, I'm very excited for where alternative display technology is going in the next couple years. Displays that you can use outside and that drain the battery way slower open up so many possibilities for auxiliary devices. My ideal device would be an ultralight android tablet with a keyboard case and an outdoor display good enough to watch youtube on, that needs to be charged less than once per day. Hopefully this product is super successful and Modos move on to standalone devices next.

    There are counter trends, like Garmin discontinuing their e-paper smartwatches. But hopefully that has more to do with that market being too narrow for viable alternatives, and not a fundamental issue with the economics of the displays themselves.

    afandian 2 hours

    Pebble is back, with MIP reflective LCD. I have one. It's great.

    https://repebble.com/

    abrowne 1 hours

    Bangle.js 2 (https://banglejs.com/) also has a transflective LCD. It's very fun product with a great community.

    Bangle.js 3 is being discussed: https://github.com/orgs/espruino/discussions/7341

  • varun_ch 3 hours

    There is an awesome YouTube video about this from the person who made it: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=nHbA2-_qzH4

    techwizrd 50 minutes

    I found the video on YouTube before the IEEE article. It's a fascinating story.

    nzach 3 hours

    This link is way more interesting than the original ieee.

    It was submitted to HN 2 times already but unfortunately it flew under the radar: https://hn.algolia.com/?q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwa...

    ckemere 2 hours

    Upvoted them both. I’m an ECE prof, and the video summed up why working with students is so rewarding.

  • throwwwll 3 hours

    Price?

    nzach 3 hours

    U$ 619 for the black and white model and U$ 719 for the color model

    https://www.crowdsupply.com/modos-tech/modos-flow#products

    good8675309 2 hours

    Not bad considering this is a niche specialty product and cutting edge. The price will come down if the demand and market grow. Assuming raw hardware costs stop rising

    imglorp 1 hours

    Will it? The whole e-ink market seems like it has never priced flexibly.

    throwwwll 3 hours

    thumbs down

    acc_297 2 hours

    that is almost guaranteed an at-cost production figure for the limited run of kickstarter funded displays there isn't a production line producing these things - watch the youtube video this guy quit his job for over a year to build a passion project into a prototype

    borg16 2 hours

    saw the video - that was so much better than this ieee link.

    learnt a lot in the process too - kudos to him

  • functionmouse 5 hours

    Unfortunately the pen is probably USI, making it borderline useless as a pen. This will not be like S-pen or Apple Pencil.

    alex-a-soto 29 minutes

    The stylus solution is provided by E Ink to us. E Ink made the switch from EMR to USI a few years ago, so most E Ink devices, including the Modos Flow are using USI now.

    zipy124 3 hours

    Although I can't find an authoritative source on it the indications do support that assumption that it is USI. Technically USI doesn't have to be bad, it just appears that quality control on the standard is bad (similarly to how USB cables often don't meet the spec and can cause troubles as a result).

    Firmware can be checked here: https://gitlab.com/zephray/enchanter

    functionmouse 2 hours

    Sure. But USI is bad unless the OEM goes out of their way to make it good, whereas EMR is good unless the OEM goes out of their way to make it bad. EMR is the better tech, and with patents expired, and numerous other benefits such as no batteries needed in the pen, it should be standard now.

    varun_ch 3 hours

    I think this device isn’t so much about a pen. It seems like it could be a really nice typing or coding or reading display. Maybe a future model could improve on the pen

    WillAdams 2 hours

    The thing is, to get a pen right, all that they have to do is license Wacom EMR/Samsung's S-Pen (Samsung owns a 40% stake in Wacom, hence using their stylus tech).

    Styluses w/ batteries/capacitors were okay once upon a time, but Wacom EMR "just works" and makes my life simpler/nicer (I couldn't count how many styluses I have around my house/in my bags so as to allow me to use my Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Pro 360, Galaxy Note 10+, Kindle Scribe Coloursoft, and Wacom One display (attached to a MacBook).

    hgoel 25 minutes

    As a fellow EMR stylus enjoyer, which one do you prefer the most? The thin one in the phones tends to be too small to use comfortably and the one that comes with the Galaxy Book/tablets is decent (but the Galaxy Book has very inconsistent support for the buttons). The Wacom One stylus used to be my favorite, but lately I've been enjoying using the Kindle Scribe stylus/the fat Staedler stylus (I think they're both very similar in usage experience).

    Palomides 1 hours

    I think licensing anything from wacom or samsung is a big ask for a two person(?) project that's making a very small run of open source/open hardware devices

    functionmouse 2 hours

    EMR patents and design specs expired. It's free. China's tooling simply hasn't caught up, because the output doesn't have to feel or work good, it simply has to look good in a kickstarter. Conjecture: I feel like this is like half the reason styluses as a technology are dying; the other half is the untimely death of the resistive display.

    Bring back resistive touch!

    WillAdams 37 minutes

    Radio frequency/compatibility seems to be a consideration --- also, don't understate the importance of tooling/tolerances even w/ Wacom overseeing things, I've had to return name-brand/licensed styluses which would not work consistently across all of my devices.

  • xnx 3 hours

    > two-person startup is back fund-raising for Modos Flow, a 13.3-inch color e-paper monitor with a higher native resolution of 3,200 x 2,400, touch input, and a 60Hz refresh rate

    Those are some mighty specs. Godspeed.

    user_7832 3 hours

    If I had the 600-odd dollars, I'd absolutely buy this. It's a damn shame it's so expensive.

    acc_297 2 hours

    I think the 600 dollar price is more than double the price of the same diplay as a mass-produced product it's a price for enthusiasts of the technology

    and it's open source so nothing stops a bigger producer of copying the exact technology with institutional funding and manufacturing expertise

    unshavedyak 1 hours

    I'd buy it but i want it in a laptop form or maybe tablet, or something. Being a monitor means the usefulness for me, ie being able to program outside, is kinda moot.

    throawayonthe 1 hours

    i think it's a portable 13in monitor, you can plug it into your phone or something if you want

    59 minutes

    unshavedyak 44 minutes

    Yea it's definitely portable, it's just not a friendly formfactor for where my compute sits, where my keyboard sits, etc. If i'm in a chair at the part i'd need a literal lap-top, three components (keyboard, compute, monitor) without a frame connecting them would make that difficult.