This is a complete reimagining of the Open Book Project, but the original mission remains:
As a society, we need an open source device for reading. Books are among the most important documents of our culture, yet the most popular and widespread devices we have for reading are closed objects, operating as small moving parts in a set of giant closed platforms whose owners’ interests are not always aligned with readers’.
The Open Book aims to be a simple device that anyone can build for themselves. The Open Book should be comprehensible: the reader should be able to look at it and understand, at least in broad strokes, how it works. It should be extensible, so that a reader with different needs can write code and add accessories that make the book work for them. It should be global, supporting readers of books in all the languages of the world. Most of all, it should be open, so that anyone can take this design as a starting point and use it to build a better book.
Check out the promo video as well:
https://youtu.be/vFD9V8Hh7Yg
- henfredemars ( @henfredemars@infosec.pub ) English83•9 months ago
When they say build it yourself, they mean it:
- 3D print case
- Solder PCB
- Compile your own firmware
For those interested, base price to build this might start at $85 based on one estimate linked from the resource.
- PLS_HELP ( @PLS_HELP@kbin.social ) 12•9 months ago
You don’t need the know-how compile the firmware! It’s available to drag and drop from GitHub: https://github.com/nvts8a/libros
- rainynight65 ( @rainynight65@feddit.de ) 7•9 months ago
Is that $85 for all parts?
Calculate the extra cost if someone doesn’t own a 3D printer (or doesn’t have access to one) or soldering gear.
- henfredemars ( @henfredemars@infosec.pub ) English6•9 months ago
Right! I believe that assumes you already have necessary tools, and it certainly can’t take into account the cost of your time or the cost of mistakes along the way.
- philpo ( @philpo@feddit.de ) 1•9 months ago
Well, printing externally costs a few bucks so that is not really the problem here.
Soldering is more complicated but that’s more a learning curve problem than an equipment problem.
- rainynight65 ( @rainynight65@feddit.de ) 1•9 months ago
As someone who has tried soldering with the wrong equipment (and thoroughly stuffed it up), it’s both. Learning with the right equipment however is a lot easier than with the wrong stuff.
And 3D printing externally can also be a bit of a trial and error process if you’re new to the whole thing.
- philpo ( @philpo@feddit.de ) 1•9 months ago
In terms of 3D printing it depends a lot on the quality of the model (which usually is pretty good in projects like this, unlike some thingiverse models) and the quality of the printing service. A reputable service will basically always produce good results,only the hole in the wall private garage services are sometimes problematic from my experience.
With soldering you are absolutely correct, it is far easier to learn with more expensive equipment (but this is still far cheaper than 3D printing, decent soldering stations go for less than 120 bucks these days), but it’s still comparably cheap - but not easy to master. Takes a lot of time.
- dansity ( @dansity@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 7•9 months ago
DIY is like that. If you look up how to make a birdhouse they will tell you you need a saw, a hammer, nails, drill, paintbrush and something to measure with. Having a 3d printer and a soldering iron nowadays is pretty low entry, you can get into it cheaper that buying the saw, hammer and drill for the birdhouse. You don’t have to buy the bambulab printer and the weller / hakko iron. You can print this case on an ender 3 you found in the dumpster. Or pay 10 bucks for someone and they will print it for you. On the other hand you will have a device you can infinitely repair unlike the kindles that are kicking the dust every few year for everyone.
- tocopherol ( @tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 1•9 months ago
It sounds wild to think about making your own electronic device, but after getting into woodworking I think it could be simpler to build this than a quality birdhouse lol.
- Juno ( @Juno@beehaw.org ) 1•9 months ago
I get that 3d printing is cool. It is, but new doesn’t always mean better.
You can still “analog 3d print” anything with know how and the right tools. So why not a simple box frame out of oak? Can’t be that hard.
- pingveno ( @pingveno@lemmy.ml ) English1•9 months ago
A friend of mine was showing me around a maker space when I was on a trip to where he now lives. They had an entire room full of various 3D printer. They’ve really gone mainstream in a big way. Getting a hold of one isn’t out of the question for a lot of people.
- Juno ( @Juno@beehaw.org ) 3•9 months ago
Idk why everyone is even insisting on a 3d printed case, just cut a square hole in a cigar box. Done.
Shit, get a thick book nobody reads and cut the middle of the book out and house a screen inside the 📖 book, glue the pages on the outside together with some modge podge. Done for the price of a cheap novel with a hardcover and some glue and a knife if you don’t have one.
- tocopherol ( @tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 1•9 months ago
Damn thank you for inspiring me, I saw the ‘3d print case’ and was like ehh, but thinking about making a wood case for this sounds sick.
- MonkderZweite ( @MonkderZweite@feddit.ch ) 2•9 months ago
I guess the E-Ink is 5"/6"? Because larger E-Ink get expensive.
Btw, E-Ink is the fallacy in openness there, because there’s a monopolist who bought possible competition up.
- MonkderZweite ( @MonkderZweite@feddit.ch ) 25•9 months ago
Though PocketBook, Tolino, Kobo, Onyx are pretty good at openness or ability to make it open.
Sure, not Open Hardware, but you can at least read what you want with them.
- CrabAndBroom ( @CrabAndBroom@lemmy.ml ) 17•9 months ago
I have a Kobo with KOReader installed and Calibre with the DeDRM plugin for managing eBooks and it’s pretty great! It’ll open just about anything you throw at it and is pretty customizable.
- ALoafOfBread ( @ALoafOfBread@lemmy.ml ) 25•9 months ago
Rakuten Kobo is a good alternative to Amazon Kindle. I can just drag and drop books, no internet connectivity necessary, no DRM… I have no problems with it at all. Would be cool to be able to load custom firmware, but I do not need to since it already doesn’t spy on me and doesn’t force DRM (3rd party book imports).
- optissima ( @optissima@possumpat.io ) 14•9 months ago
Have you installed nickelmenu and koreader? Brings the experience up a couple of levels software side.
- biscuit ( @biscuit@beehaw.org ) 9•9 months ago
Koreader blasted my “aging” 1st Gen H2O into space with all the speed and features it added.
- Faster page turning
- Wallabag support
- Most of all: SFTP transfer from my phone
It’s wild.
- cloud ( @cloud@lazysoci.al ) 3•9 months ago
but I do not need to since it already doesn’t spy on me
let’s see the source code
- MonkderZweite ( @MonkderZweite@feddit.ch ) 1•9 months ago
Some Kobo have a Lineageos port.
- conciselyverbose ( @conciselyverbose@kbin.social ) 16•9 months ago
IDK. Building your own is cool in theory, but there are a bunch of options that aren’t that bad price wise that run Android.
The issue is that they’re made by random Chinese companies and the software support is of varying quality. A focused community effort to support an Android build explicitly for readers and to hack their way to being installable on as many as possible seems like a better plan.
I have two (13" boox max 3, 6 inch reinkstone r1 that I just grabbed because it was $140 with color) and even with the mediocre software support the reading experience is pretty decent.
- PLS_HELP ( @PLS_HELP@kbin.social ) 3•9 months ago
For anyone interested our Discord is here! We’re a fun group of folks and have a couple of other projects. The project is mostly for fun and definitely centered around folks who are maybe trying to break into the hardware and software space with something tangible that they can use and show off, it certainly isn’t financially the best option out there but to learn and grow it’s great fun!
- conciselyverbose ( @conciselyverbose@kbin.social ) 1•9 months ago
I’m all for the fun aspect, and would love better panel availability. I will definitely look closer at some future point to explore projects for some of my pis.
- PLS_HELP ( @PLS_HELP@kbin.social ) 9•9 months ago
For anyone interested our Discord is here! We’re a fun group of folks and have a couple of other projects. The project is mostly for fun and definitely centered around folks who are maybe trying to break into the hardware and software space with something tangible that they can use and show off, it certainly isn’t financially the best option out there but to learn and grow it’s great fun!
- cloud ( @cloud@lazysoci.al ) 5•9 months ago
- nossaquesapao ( @nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br ) 6•9 months ago
For the people commenting about prices and comparing it to kindle:
Unfortunately, open source hardware is in its infancy, and faces severe barriers of entry, but projects like this one are really nice in order to further develop the concept and make working prototypes, proving its viability.
- christophski ( @christophski@feddit.uk ) English4•9 months ago
I don’t understand, it seems perfectly reasonable - people are just so used to these products being sold at a loss or at cost and subsidised by huge companies.
I would happily pay extra to not be tied to a massive corporation.
- nossaquesapao ( @nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br ) 1•9 months ago
And if we think about it, it would only cost more at first, because open hardware would last longer and be repairable, costing much less in the long run.
- Emanuel ( @Emanuel@lemmy.eco.br ) 0•9 months ago
Ideally, how would open source hardware look like for you? I mean that as in after it has achieved something akin to mainstream adoption.
- nossaquesapao ( @nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br ) 1•9 months ago
This is a great question. I don’t believe it can reach the point of any person simply being able to create their own hardware, unless we’re talking about an utopic future with multimaterial 3d printing in small scale, but I can see small businesses being able to manufacture custom open source hardware on demand, based on open standards. For me, the ideal scenario would be something like going into an open hardware service shop and asking for a device with your requirements, and they creating it for you, or repairing/upgrading yours.
- 10_0 ( @10_0@lemmy.ml ) 5•9 months ago
Can’t wait for the devs to make prebuilds buyable!
- Phanatik ( @Phanatik@kbin.social ) 3•9 months ago
I don’t own a 3D printer so can someone spitball the cost of printing this?
- anguo ( @anguo@lemmy.ca ) 5•9 months ago
The cost is really the printer itself and the time invested. This would probably cost ~1$ of material, and take …3 hours of printing?
- PLS_HELP ( @PLS_HELP@kbin.social ) 2•9 months ago
The case doesn’t need any special material so whatever’s cheapest usually works, especially if all you’re worried about is protection and not style. In face you technically don’t even need the case, the one I develop the firmware on is bare, but still, you shouldn’t have to spend more than probably $10 USD, maybe cheaper if you can find a local maker space to help you print it.
- I_am_10_squirrels ( @I_am_10_squirrels@beehaw.org ) 4•9 months ago
Some public libraries have 3d printers
- xapr ( @xapr@lemmy.sdf.org ) English1•9 months ago
I don’t know the exact cost, but there are online services to do 3D printing for you, like Shapeways. I’ve used it before. It made more sense than buying my own printer. I downloaded a design from Thingiverse.com, uploaded to Shapeways.com and ordered the print. They will give you the price before you order.
- craigevil ( @craigevil@lemmy.ml ) 3•9 months ago
Does it have a SD card slot, and if so can it take a 256GB card? 26k epubs and pdfs. Who pays for books?
- ILikeBoobies ( @ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca ) 1•9 months ago
Well endowed individuals
- Flying Squid ( @FlyingSquid@lemmy.ml ) 6•9 months ago
True. I pay for books and also have a large penis.
- ILikeBoobies ( @ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca ) 2•9 months ago
Thanks for confirming, I just assumed because I never buy books