A camera that reads text aloud

Ben Foss, director of access technology in Intel's Digital Health Group, uses the Intel Reader to scan a book. Photo: Jon Fortt.
When Ben Foss's father in law was dying of liver cancer months ago, friends suggested Foss read "How We Die" to help the family with the grieving process. Foss has dyslexia, and finding an audio version of the book or scanning it into a computer typically would be an ordeal. But in this case he was able to plow through it at 250 words per minute.
Foss did it with an early version of the Intel (INTC) Reader, a $1,500 device he dreamed up along with colleagues in Intel's Digital Health Group. The device launches today as the first consumer product from the five-year-old group. And though its name seems to place it in the same category as trendy ebook readers from Amazon (AMZN), Sony (SNE) and Barnes & Noble (BKS), this reader is profoundly different.
This is not another thin tablet that displays text; instead it's more like a chunky digital camera that instantly captures the words on a printed page and pronounces them aloud. That makes it little more than a curio for mainstream gadget lovers, but a potential godsend for those who struggle to read standard text because of learning disabilities or vision problems. More
Barnes & Noble bets on the Nook

Barnes & Noble eReader, the Nook
If you're the type of early Christmas shopper who bought a Kindle last week, I hope you kept the receipt, because a newer, equally affordable option is about to hit shelves.
Barnes & Noble (BKS) CEO Steve Riggio on Tuesday took the stage before hundreds of authors, agents, publishers and pundits to debut the company's electronic reader, the Nook.
The Nook will sell for just $259, a steep discount from competitors like the Sony (SNE) Reader and the iRex DR800SG , which both retail for $399. The price suggests Barnes & Noble is going straight for Amazon (AMZN), which recently lowered the Kindle's price to $259.
The Nook uses the same screen technology that powers Amazon's Kindle, but adds an iPhone-like color touchscreen below for easy navigation. Readers have access to 3G wireless on AT&T's broadband network. The reader holds up to 1,500 books (like its major competitor), but an expandable memory slot allows readers to add up to 17,500 more. "You're getting a lot of eReader for the money," says Sarah Rotman Epps, an analyst with Forrester Research.
Another novel experiment: lending. Barnes & Noble lets readers share titles with friends on any platform in the Barnes & Noble ecosystem. So you like the "Tipping Point?" Buy it for your Nook and lend it to your sister to read on her Barnes & Noble iPhone application. (She'd better not procrastinate; she has 14 days before it disappears.)
Barnes & Noble will turn its massive retail presence into a competitive advantage. Over the next few weeks, the bookstore chain will roll out Nook displays in its 700 stores and 600 college bookstores. Through complimentary Wi-Fi connections in all the stores, readers will be able to browse eBooks on their readers just as they might have always browsed the shelves.
Barnes & Noble unveils largest ebookstore
Book retailer partners with Plastic Logic and Google to take on rival Amazon.
The world’s largest bookseller has taken the wraps off the world’s largest e-bookstore. Barnes & Noble (BN) announced yesterday the availability of more than 700,000 digital e-books, along with free e-reader software for the iPhone, BlackBerry, Mac and PC platforms. “It’s a unique every-device strategy,” said William Lynch, president of BN.com in a conference call.
The strategy is clearly aimed at Amazon.com (AMZN) and its popular Kindle e-reader, which I wrote about recently here, as well as the eReader from Sony (SNE). Like Amazon, BN is offering many new releases and best-sellers for $9.99. Unlike Amazon, Barnes & Noble will also allow users to download nearly a half-million public-domain books for free, courtesy of a partnership with Google (GOOG). More


