Thin-Window - an Electronic Book 
          Posted by Tsert.Com
           
            The Thin-Window device is an electronic book, running an
            operating system, derived from our Kodiak-BSD OS, which has
            an in-kernel HTTP daemon, allowing a person to browse
            through scanned books and documents (patent
              pending). 
            
          
           
         
        
          Thin-Window - an Electronic Book
          Posted by Tsert.Com ThinkTank
          
            The Thin-Window device is
              an electronic book, that a person can use to browse
              through scanned books and documents. It comes in two
              versions, a portable desktop version and a version.
              The desktop version is a PI-Widget in tablet-form;
              and the library version is built looking like a sheet of
              paper, using electronic paper, surrounded by a frame made
              of solar cells. 
              
              The display of the library version, is either, pressure
              sensitive, responding to a person's finger presssure on
              its surface, or relies on scroll buttons situated at each
              corner, for browsing trough documents transmitted by a
              central server.
              
             The shape of the device is
              squarish -- legal-paper size for libraries; and
              pocket-book size for portable electronic books. The device
              is thin, and most of its screen real estate is made up of
              a paper-like bendable display, that is made acid-rain
              resistent through appropriate compounds. 
              
             The scroll buttons are used to
              scroll through a given displayed page. All modes of
              traversal, through a displayed page, using scroll buttons
              are patent pending. We only present the first
              one on this patent application -- see ScrollDot.
              
              
             A single click of the top-side
              buttons, causes the cursor to skip, from one link, to
              another in the vertical orientation; a single click of the
              bottom-side buttons, causes the cursor to skip, from one
              link, to another in the horizontal orientation. To select
              a link, any one button can be double clicked. 
              
             To scroll up and down, the
              top-side buttons must be momentarily pressed, and
              released. The scrolling continues, to a given rate, until
              the same button is clicked once. 
              
             To scroll right and left, the
              bottom-side buttons must be momentarily pressed, and
              released. The scrolling continues, to a given rate, until
              the same button is clicked once. 
              
             Continuing pressure, on any of
              the above buttons, causes a continuous scroll, which
              stops, as son as, the pressed button is released. 
              
             Forward page turning is done,
              by clicking once, on the bottom-right button, while the
              cursor is not positioned on any link. Backwards page
              turning is done, by clicking once, on the bottom-left
              button, while the cursor is also not positioned on any
              link. 
              
             To disable the positioning of
              the cursor on a link, any one button can be pressed,
              momentarily (a few milliseconds), for scrolling.
              
              Zooming-in and out is effected through any of the four
              buttons.
              
             The device houses flat hardware
              connectors for networking; as well as, power, earphone,
              and speaker modules and connectors. The power is supplied
              by strips of solar cells, rechargeable batteries, and
              through a flat power adaptor. 
              
            Books and other types of document
              can be downloaded and stored, via an internet, or cellular
              network connector module. Digitized
              books can simply be tranferred to the device; as if you
              were syncing your portable computer to your desktop
              computer. 
            
             This device can be used by
              libraries, and other organizations which need to digitize
              their catalogued information, and store them on servers.
              The digitized information can be accessed, by this device,
              by connecting to the servers through its built-in HTTP
              daemon. 
              
            
              Patent
                Pending 
              
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