The first page of submissions for the latest 1 Hour Design Challenge is a stunner, so get out those markers or 3D packages and get moviing. You've got 'til next Tuesday to enter, but why not take an hour out of your Friday afternoon and bang something out? (Unless you've got a great book you've been dying to read, natch.) Images above are the nu*book from Yo, the eScroll from kinl, and the no name from dmcm. Here's are the competition details:
Doors Opened: Tuesday, December 4th 10 AM PST (5 GMT)
Last Call: Tuesday, December 11th 1 PM PST (8 GMT)
Theme: The perfect eBook
Brief: Love it or hate it, Amazon's Kindle Reader has people talking about digital reading devices. No matter what side of the fence you are on, here's your chance to show the world your vision of the perfect Digital eBook. We want you to take an hour out of your day and show us what you've got.
Prize: $125 NikeID Gift Certificate (just in time for the Holidays)
Jury: Winner will be selected by the Core77 Admin. Community discussion is encouraged to help ensure the best design wins.
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Comments
Envision a tablet measuring 6" x 8" x 1/4" thick. A single USB port handles transfer of titles and charging.
No need to put a bunch of buttons on it --Just make a simple track-pad like touch screen without obscuring labels. Move your finger up and down to scroll. Tap upper-right for page-up, lower-right for page down. Upper-left for menu. Lower-left for enter. Maybe swirl your finger for fast scroll.
Use a reflective display like e-paper or even simple, high-res B&W LCD with optional backlight and, of course, anti-alias it.
Round all of the corners for a little sex appeal. It fits in my travel bag easier than a paperback. I toss it on the night stand and forget about it 'til I pack my bags. It doesn't have Wi-Fi and gets FAA approval for use during takeoff.
I can read it on a park bench in bright sunlight on a Sunday afternoon after a nice bike ride at Miami Whitewater Forest.
I listen to a LOT of podcasts when I'm driving to and fro; I'd love the option of one or the other (or both - perhaps as a way to teach literacy?).