Former editor of CNET Australia, Pam loves being in the thick of the ever-growing love affair (well addiction, really) that Australians have with their phones, digital cameras, flat screen TVs, and ...
Samsung on Tuesday announced its first e-book reader for the U.S. market, the E60 e-reader, which will use the Barnes & Noble e-book library and arrive in the spring for $299. First previewed at CES ...
Chris is the former Editor of Pocket-lint. He has been a technology journalist since 2008 and has covered the rise of Android and reviewed just about every important device along the way. Chris lives ...
Glorified newsagent WHSmith is to become the latest shop to stock a resident ebook reader. While Waterstones offers the Sony Reader and Amazon promote its Kindle, WHSmith will be trying to sell you ...
Samsung is set to start the distribution of its new eBook Readers in partnership with leading high street book retailer, WHSmith. The Samsung E60 is available online now and in stores. Smaller than a ...
Samsung predictably announced an ebook reader at CES 2010 just like nearly every other company there. The E60, originally called the E6, is a cute little device, with a slider design and a touchscreen ...
Bookseller Barnes & Noble might be best known for its Nook e-reader, but, unlike competitor Amazon.com, the company seems keen to embrace e-reader devices from a variety of manufacturers into an open ...
Its 6in e-ink screen puts it in familiar eReader territory, but unlike others we’ve seen it comes with a phone-like slider design to reveal navigation controls beneath. The E60 also includes a stylus ...
Good news, fellow Brits! Samsung has just announced that it'll be shipping its two 6-inch, stylus-donning e-readers -- the slide-out E60 and the QWERTY-packing E61-- to the UK in July, with the former ...
Samsung still hasn't committed to a formal launch date for the e-reader line it launched at CES, but the company narrowed down the launch date from "early 2010" to "this spring" this morning -- which ...
Samsung could have produced a simple, slim gadget to display e-books, but instead it over-engineered the E60 in a bid to beat the opposition. The result is a chunky, clunky device the looks backward ...
The last new Eseries phone is the E60. It's not headed for the US specifically, although I don't expect many people to be upset about that. The reason is the relatively large size, and a feature set ...
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