On 09/01/14 12:31, Vassilii Khachaturov wrote:
> 5) isn't illegal to have in Israel because of its wireless
> capabilities (in fact, I'd like to be able to disable any wireless
> technology and not to use it anyway).
I never could figure that one out.
A router/access point needs to be told what co
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 4:24 PM, geoffrey mendelson <
geoffreymendel...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 1/9/2014 3:08 PM, Vassilii Khachaturov wrote:
>
>> Thanks for your answer. When I posted a link to a matrix of all the
>> current eink-based readers, I assumed it is obvious I want an e-ink based
>> one.
On 09.01.2014 16:24, geoffrey mendelson wrote:
On 1/9/2014 3:08 PM, Vassilii Khachaturov wrote:
Thanks for your answer. When I posted a link to a matrix of all the
current eink-based readers, I assumed it is obvious I want an e-ink
based one. I'd think dedicated reader would be more
energy/wei
I'd say that the e-ink is not yet obsolete. B&N and Amazon still sell them
and will continue to do so, as the tablets are not a friendly device to
read a long book or document. e-ink readers are not good for video, or even
web browsing, but they are umatched for reading books on the road/plane.
The