![]() ![]() I read on one, I browse and check out books on something else. I think you will find there are lots of things you *could* do on one that you'd *rather* do on just about anything else. I think you aren't going to find everything you want on one device, you may have to pick your poison.Įink screens aren't that fast (except, maybe, Dasungs) and are subject to ghosting, etc. Which is why I started with my previous comment. I think you'd be happier settling for just running calibre somewhere else and getting a Boox / R2 / etc. But, if this sort of fiddling floats you boat, maybe.Īlso, I lied, I have some idea how this 2nd option might play out, since I had a Yoga book with eink screen and. (Which is why I suggest partitioning, so you don't kill off the bits that do work while tinkering with Linux) Personally, besides being the most expensive option and most complicated out of the box, I think it won't be portable enough. ![]() Now, how that e-ink screen would then play on LInux? No clue, Lenovo has specialized drivers and software to make it work on the Windows side. If cost is *really* no object, you might get a ThinkBook Plus Gen 2, which is a windows PC that has a regular screen and an eink screen (no backlight though.) Then partition it, and install Linux as a 2nd OS. two other options come to mind, both clunky, and no idea how well either would work in practice.ĭasung not e-reader 103 is an android tablet that doubles as an eink monitor (don't have one and not sure how it would work with a Linux machine.) It can also do screen mirroring with, eg, a smartphone. If you *still* really want Linux, and cost is no object. ![]()
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