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The Mobile Gadgeteer

Matthew Miller & Joel Evans

CES 2010: QUE proReader lets you work with documents, not just read them

By | January 7, 2010, 9:44am PST

Summary: I just returned from the Plastic Logic press event on the CES 2010 show floor where they unveiled everything about the QUE proReader. If you are looking for another ebook reader to compete with the nook, Kindle, or Sony Reader then you might as well stop reading this post now and look for my other articles because this is NOT a competitor to those devices that are focused on ebook reading. The QUE proReader is a device for the mobile business professional who wants to take their electronic file cabinet with them on the go to read and work with their documents. My engineering office is almost entirely paperless and we do everything digitally so I can easily see where this device will fill the gap between the small screen smartphone and the heavy, processor intensive laptop.

I just returned from the Plastic Logic press event on the CES 2010 show floor where they unveiled everything about the QUE proReader. If you are looking for another ebook reader to compete with the nook, Kindle, or Sony Reader then you might as well stop reading this post now and look for my other articles because this is NOT a competitor to those devices that are focused on ebook reading. The QUE proReader is a device for the mobile business professional who wants to take their electronic file cabinet with them on the go to read and work with their documents. My engineering office is almost entirely paperless and we do everything digitally so I can easily see where this device will fill the gap between the small screen smartphone and the heavy, processor intensive laptop.

The QUE proReader is extremely then and felt great in my hand. There is one single button on the entire device to help you quickly jump back to the Home screen. The Home screen is also business focused with your synced up Outlook calendar appearing on the left side with appointment attachment support. The center area is for your content with thumbnails of documents. The lower right has an area where you can pin your favorites and the lower left has a button for the QUE Catalog.

As you can see, the QUE Catalog is powered on the back end by Barnes & Noble with a business focus so you will see BusinessWeek top sellers rather than the New York Times bestseller list and much more for the enterprise user. However, you will still be able to fully access all Barnes & Noble electronic content so you can buy ebooks and read them as well.

The QUE is 8.5 by 11 inches in size and very thin. It is made of plastic, including the display, so its display is shatterproof and quite durable. Even though the display is a capacitive touchscreen I was amazed by how clear the fonts are on it. There is no touch layer degrading the eInk clarity on this device like we see on other ebook readers. The onscreen QWERTY keyboard is just under half the size of the display in portrait mode so it is easy to tap on and enter text for notes or searches. All navigation is done by touch, including circling text and making notes with digital ink pens.

To get documents on your QUE you can print to it via a printer driver you install on your PC, you can drag and drop to the QUE It folder on your PC and have them appear on your QUE, or you can send them from your BlackBerry smartphone via Bluetooth with the BlackBerry application. The QUE has WiFi, Bluetooth, and USB support for document transfer.

QUE has a technology called truVue that keeps documents in their original format so you don’t have to compromise to get them into digital eInk form. The USA Today has a definite style in print and they are able to bring that same experience to the proReader as you can see in my photo.

There are actually two models to start with, the QUE 4GB has 4GB of internal memory (35,000 documents), WiFi, and Bluetooth and will sell for $649 and the QUE 8GB has 8GB of internal memory (75,000 documents), WiFi, Bluetooth, and AT&T 3G support for $799. You can pre-order them now with availability slated for mid-April.

While this may seem expensive, if you are a business user who works a lot with documents I think people will find it very attractive. I don’t work this way so my B&N nook is perfect for my ebook reading.

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Matthew Miller is an avid mobile device enthusiast who works during the day as a professional naval architect in Seattle.

Disclosure

Matthew Miller

Matthew is a professional naval architect by day and a mobile gadget freak at all other times. He purchases most of his devices and then sells them on eBay or Craigslist to buy more. Many other devices are sent for review on a 30-day loaner basis and then returned to the carrier or manufacturer. If any are provided as “keeper” or “long term loaner units” this will be clearly disclosed in his reviews.

Biography

Matthew Miller

Matthew Miller is an avid mobile device enthusiast who works during the day as a professional naval architect in Seattle. He is one of three hosts on the MobileTechRoundup podcast and runs the Nokia Experts website. Matthew started using mobile devices in 1997 with a US Robotics Pilot 1000 and has owned over 90 different devices running Palm, Linux, Symbian, Newton, BlackBerry, Mac OS X (iPhone), Google Android, and Windows Mobile operating systems. His current collection includes a Nokia N85, Nokia E71, Nokia 5800, Nokia N810, Apple iPhone, HTC Advantage, T-Mobile G1, Palm Treo Pro, HTC Fuze, MSI Wind, MacBook Pro, and many more, along with tons of accessories and classic devices like the Apple Newton MessagePad 2100 and Sony CLIE UX50. Matthew co-authored Master Visually Windows Mobile 2003, was a member of the Nokia Nseries Blogger relations program, and is a member of the invite-only Microsoft Mobius mobile device evangelist group. He can be found on various discussion forums under the user name of "palmsolo".

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RE: CES 2010: QUE proReader lets you work with documents, not just read the
Montebello 9th Jan 2010
I have seen it myself at the CES and I must assume it is a
great product it looks nice! But it is too expensive for me and
to big to carry. So I found another device, the Onyx Boox 60
at CES that I really like and which is really affordable.
Unfortunately they didn't provide me a sample. So I ordered it
online at http://www.ebookreaderdiscounter.com/onyx-
boox-60-wifi-ereader.html, which took only two days to
receive it here in LA!
0 Votes
+ -
Not @ those prices...
mrlinux 7th Jan 2010
I could get a very good laptop happy
Too big, too expensive even for business user. I am a
physician and this device does not fit in anywhere in my
professional life.
0 Votes
+ -
good option, but
francisco1de9jess46@... 8th Jan 2010
no sd card slot? and the price too high, but I will wait your video review with more info. Thanks
I have seen it myself at the CES and I must assume it is a
great product it looks nice! But it is too expensive for me and
to big to carry. So I found another device, the Onyx Boox 60
at CES that I really like and which is really affordable.
Unfortunately they didn't provide me a sample. So I ordered it
online at http://www.ebookreaderdiscounter.com/onyx-
boox-60-wifi-ereader.html, which took only two days to
receive it here in LA!

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