Samsung E60 Ereader Ties to Barnes & Noble

Samsung's E6 ereader with Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and a 6-inch Eink display is due to launch at Barnes & Noble "imminently."

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 ecosystem. The next contender to tap into the Barnes & Noble eBookstore will apparently be the Samsung E60, a 6-inch E-ink ereader that will market Samsung’s first entry in the U.S. ereader market. Samsung demonstrated the device at CES in January, now says its launch is “imminent.”

“We are very excited to be entering the explosive eReader market with a device that brings the best of a traditional reading experience into the digital age,” said Samsung Electronics America’s senior VP Reid Sullivan, in a statement. “Samsung prides itself on identifying and fulfilling unmet consumer needs through innovation, and the eReader is emblematic of that approach.”

The E60 features an 800 by 600-pixel 6-inch E-ink  display with 8-levels-of-grey and supports common formats like text, PDF, BMP, JPEG, and Epub—which is handy, because Barnes & Noble’s content library is based on the Epub format, with more than 1 million books and periodicals available. The E60 features integrated Wi-Fi and Bluetooth wireless networking, 2GB of internal memory (and microSD expansion for up to 16GB more), an integrated MP3 player, a microphone (for voice recording), text-to-speech technology, and features a electromagnetic resonance (EMR) stylus pen that users can use to make annotations, memos, and manage their schedules—and those schedules can be synced with Outlook. There’s also the rather unfortunately-named “EmoLink” technology that enables readers to share content between Samsung Reader devices…like, perhaps your latest poem about a dead rose.

Samsung hasn’t announced pricing for the Samsung E6; however, the companies were talking about a $399 price point during CES. The companies also haven’t mentioned two other devices on demo at CES: the Samsung E61 (which has a QWERTY keypad) or the Samsung E10, which features a 10-inch Eink display.

[Update: 10-Mar-2010: Barnes & Noble spokesperson Mary Ellen Keating contacted Digital Trends to note neither Barnes & Noble nor Samsung have made any announcement about Barnes & Noble offering the E6 Reader for sale.]

Showing 5 comments

  1. introspective at 12:54pm 20th April 2010 This e-book reader looks very nice. When does it comes out and what will be the price?
  2. Dan Gaul at 8:59am 8th April 2010 Hm, that's funny. What makes a "serious" reader?

    Have you looked at what the Kindle app or iBooks looks like on the iPad?
  3. Name at 8:27am 8th April 2010 The ipad is not an ereader. Check out what eink is.
    For serious readers only products using eink can be used
  4. symux at 10:41pm 3rd April 2010 This sounds like an interesting idea, but I can't get over how old and outdated the appearance is. It reminds me of the Palm Pilots of 1996. It is nothing but black and white terminal type text. Why have they opted for something so cheap and dated? Today's computers can handle much more, as can our devices. The Ipad will make this product sink like the cement block it is.
  5. dang at 3:03pm 9th March 2010 I played with this at CES, and they were pretty cool. The build quality is nice, and I love how the navigation slides up/down like a qwerty keyboard on some phones.
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