Engineering:Pocket eDGe

From HandWiki
enTourage pocket eDGe
ManufacturerenTourage Systems, Inc.
TypeHybrid tablet computer, e-book
Release dateNovember 12, 2010
Operating systemAndroid 2.2
CPU800 MHz Marvell PXA168
Storage(total/user available) 3,7 GB/3 GB internal flash memory
Formats supported:
File:
EPUB, PDF
Audio:
MP3, WAV, 3GPP, MP4, AAC, OGG, M4A
Video:
3GP, MP4, Adobe Flash Lite (H.264)

DisplayE-paper:
mono e-ink display
6.0 in diagonal
800 x 600 pixels
8-level grayscale
LCD:
colour TFT display
7 in diagonal
800 × 480 pixels
16 777 216 colour tones
Input2 x USB 2.0,
micro-SD card
MMC
SDHC
built-in microphone
3.5 mm stereo headphone jack
built-in speaker,
AC power adapter jack
CameraFront camera:
2 mega pixel
ConnectivityWiFi 802.11 b/g
Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR
Powerlithium polymer battery
6hr life on LCD
16hr life on E-Reader
Dimensions7.5 × 5.5 × 1.0 in when closed
Mass1.35 lb (610 g)

The enTourage pocket eDGe is a discontinued combined tablet computer and e-book made by enTourage Systems Inc., a small company based out of McLean, Virginia.[1] It is the first follow on to the original EnTourage eDGe released earlier in 2010. The device runs Google's Android platform, version 2.2. It is called by the manufacturer as the world's first mini-dualbook".[2]

On May 23, 2011 the company announced that it would no longer manufacture and distribute the Pocket Edge.[3]

Features

The Pocket eDGe is a dual screen device. One screen is a touch-sensitive 6.0 inch E Ink display, while the other screen is a full color 7.0 inch LCD touch screen. The color display side runs Android. Unlike most android devices, entourage pocket edge has its own suite of applications, rather than using the Android Market. Both displays are touchscreens, and the interface of the device provides interaction between the two according to appropriate actions and data formats. The LCD is designed for multimedia display, whereas the e-Ink screen is designed for reading and, in the corresponding mode, the ink can be marked as handwriting, indexed, searched, and even converted to text.[4]

External links

  • Official website

Reference list