Jumbo dual-screen tablet Kno debuts at D8

By Peter Smith  6 comments

If you were bummed when Microsoft pulled the plug on it's Courier project, you might be interested in the Kno, another dual-screen e-reader/tablet that debuted at All Things Digital's D8 conference yesterday.

The Kno is a big device, having two 14.1 inch (1440 x 900) capacitive touch screens. Each screen has its own battery, giving the Kno 8-hours of battery life, but a hefty weight of 5.5 lbs (I suppose all that glass contributes to the weight as well). As a point of reference, the iPad weighs 1.5 lbs and people complain it's too heavy. On the other hand, the Kno is so big that you'd probably lay it on a desk to use it. And the target audience is students; if Kno (the company) has its way, students will be carrying around a Kno (the device) rather than a stack of textbooks. That's the reason for the huge screens; most textbook pages can be shown 'full size' on a 14" screen. Five and a half pounds doesn't seem so bad compared to a backpack full of textbooks.

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Inside the Kno is a Tegra 2 chip and 16 GBs of storage space. It runs a browser based OS running on embedded Linux that sounds almost like Chrome OS in some ways. Engadget, who got some hands-on time with the device, says "the entire experience is essentially a WebKit instance." Price is still up in the air but Ina Fried at CNET says the company is aiming for a price well under $1000.

Ina Fried conducted a video interview with Kno's co-founders and the video includes some footage of the device working. I'm including that video, in addition to a marketing video showing what the intended experience should eventually be like, below. Keep in mind the Kno isn't production-ready yet, so there's bound to be a bit of wonkiness when you see it working.

Kno Movie from Kno, Inc. on Vimeo.

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Peter Smith writes about personal technology for ITworld.

6 comments

    Anonymous 1 year ago
    Get off the weight issue you wimps. Look at the target use, namely replacing 30+ lbs. of textbooks. Give me that choice when I was going through school and I know where I would spend my money. I would like to kno more about it's response time, screen sensitivity and ruggedness. College is not a benign environment for student materials.
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    There are many of us who have been waiting for this. If Apple had an Ipad version where 2 of them were hooked together to open like a book, I might have bought one. This is something for people over 40 who have vision difficulties and REALLY dislike the preponderance of devices with tiny screens for reading. I am glad that someone has developed a true ebook. Hopefully when it becomes commercially available they'll have found a way to reduce the weight.....
    Anonymous 1 year ago in reply to Anonymous
    I agree this is definitely a good one for us older folks. The annoyance of straining to see an iphone screen or trying to read pdf's on a 6" ebook reader is just not understood by the youngsters (who will be where we are vision wise much sooner than they think). I will definitely give this a look vice a new laptop, iPad, Apad, or the likes. The weight is an issue for sure..... but, hey we have come a long way from the Osborne (http://techyshit.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/image16.png)
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    Stupid to have two color screens, one non sleepy ePaper screen and one sleepy color I could see a use for and would buy. This is just dumb.
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    I would rather duct tape two iPad's together because they would only weight three pounds.
    Anonymous 1 year ago in reply to Anonymous
    until you can spell you shouldn't post.

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