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| Foxit eSlick Foxit's new ebook reader, the eSlick, is specially designed to support multiple formats and enables users to view various documents with ease. Supported formats are PDF, TXT, eReader format, any printable documents (after converted to PDF using included software). Also supports MP3 audio. |
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#1
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Ok, I got my e-slick, have used it a little while and finally got a chance to take some pictures and a video of it.
Note regarding the video: I fumbled a bit with the landscape mode because I never actually use it. I prefer to see the whole page at once. It's actually pretty easy. I didn't go too in-depth into the mp3-player or bookmark capabilities because i don't really use either of those features. I also forgot to demonstrate the side button-presses. You can skip several pages at a time by pressing the r/l buttons. You can also skip through lists of files that way if you have a ton of them. Pictures here youtube video Overall, I'm very impressed with the e-slick. It handles pdf's the way you'd like, making it easy to read them in the original formatting. It charges fast and holds it's charge for a long time when not in use. Interface is intuitive and very easy to use. I was pleased to see that resizing pdf's to fit the full screen worked very well. A few things that could use improvement: Make the e-slick automatically save the current page when it turns off. Right now it'll only store the page you're on if you exit out to the main menu prior to it shutting off. It can be frustrating if you've read 20 or 30 pages to have to navigate back to where you were. Another thing I noticed is the button sometimes double presses unless you only press the very outer edge. If you accidently press the the inner gray area (not the inner square, but the darker gray area of the navigation part) it'll either refresh the current page or go down and then back up to the current page (not positive which). That also should be corrected. A suggestion regarding storing the last page for files - you make small position files to store the current position of documents older than the last 10 so you can get around the problem of trying to keep track of a number of them. Just small corresponding files that store the current location and loaded at the same time as the document. Landscape, reflow, and zoom (other than the full page zoom) I have no use for me because I like to see full pages at once and never use those modes. I'll leave any feedback regarding those and text files to others who deal with them more. I would not reflow anything except for plain text anyway because in my opinion it makes files look terrible. I also would not recommend this for reading text-books because you really need a larger reader to be able to see the text clearly when it's that small and you don't want to constantly be scrolling up and down. Other than that, I also noted like others that the battery life is far shorter than the 8000 pages the spec give it. I would say something like 300-600 would be a more accurate guess. All in all, a very sleek, well thought-out reading device. I'm very happy with my purchase and would gladly recommend this to anyone who wants to read their documents on the go. A great place to get nicely formatted classics is planetebook. You can also get them from Guttenberg etc... I just liked their versions because they were clean and neat. Update 4/4/9: I just had a strange problem with my e-slick. It froze and wouldn't respond to anything until I pressed the reset button and then unplugged/replugged in the battery. Hopefully it was just that once *crossing fingers* Last edited by foxitupbaby; April 4th, 2009 at 07:57 PM. |
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#2
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Thanks much for your feedback. I will let out developers know these.
About 'the battery life is far shorter than the 8000 pages'. --It has a theoretical prerequisite: small text file, in Fit Page mode, keep flipping page without pausing. Hope you understand. Quote:
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Pls. indicate Platform/OS/Reader Version and Reproduce-Steps for Bug Reports. Send file to: support@foxitsoftware.com indicating from BBS and related topic link. |
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#3
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It seems that eSlick doesn't match my need a little bit since it is not good to read textbook and academic journal research papers with two columns including tables and figures. I will test it once I have it.
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#4
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In terms of the last page loaded indicator, my recommendation was to make a small file corresponding to each file on the device telling it what page to load/bookmarks/etc... I would just have it make that file when the document is first loaded to avoid the need for maintaining a database. A simple check for that file's preference file when you load the document. If it's present, you read the last page and go to that. If it's not, you create the file. This would allow for storing the "last position" on all documents instead of just the last 10. For organization's sake and to avoid clutter, you would either want to hide the file while on the viewer or create a separate folder to store these. Quote:
The reason I recommend against using it for textbooks/academic journals is because of the text size, not because it can't display them properly. I don't like reading in layout mode, which would be a prerequisite to see complex charts properly without squinting and struggling to read them. If you have some that you can "fit-to-screen" without elaborate borders you may be okay. If you have some you want me to check for you, send me a PM and I'll post them back to my twitter. Last edited by foxitupbaby; April 3rd, 2009 at 06:02 AM. |
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#5
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Awesome review, I was in the market for a device that handled PDF. So the only two devices available were sony's PRS-700 and fox it. I ended up going for the sony reader, I was able to get it for $30 more than foxit's device.
If you want I can also take pictures for you on my sony reader for comparison. I actually wish I had some comparisons before I made the purchase, but I'm happy with my purchase. I just wish the screen was a little better. Sony's PRS-700 supports zooming and panning the image. The screen is most likely worse than the eslick due to the touch screen. Eslick has the nice fit to content view option, which I wish I had. Sony also has a reflow which is pretty nice. I loved how sony supported more than just PDFs. I'm sure eslick will be able to support more in the future. |
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#6
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For me, a student, price is one of main considerations. If possible for me to buy one sony 700 with $30 more than the price of eSlick, I do choose sony 700. How did you get it with that low price? Just curious.
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#7
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I'm also hoping to read two-column academic journal papers when my eSlick arrives, but I am more hopeful as tools exist to allow you to reformat a two-column pdf into one-column. In fact I posted instructions on how to do this using LaTeX but the post was removed by a moderator for some unexplained reason. I since discovered a tool called papercrop that does this but I haven't tried it.
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#8
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I would, but it wouldn't really be an accurate comparison since things like lighting, etc... would be a bit different so it wouldn't really be a clear matchup probably. |
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#9
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#10
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Sure, go for it. I'm happy with mine and since you'll be supporting ebook stores soon, even the complainers about being a pdf-only reader should be satisfied.
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