Concluding Remarks

The Sony DPT-S1's feature set and pricing make it clear that business users are the primary target market. Posts on various e-reader forums indicate that the device is gaining popularity amongst academics and lawyers. Despite the business / enterprise focus, there is nothing preventing power users from using it as a standard e-reader. In fact, the device, when used in the landscape mode with a two-page thumbnail view (a feature introduced in firmware v1.5.50.1180 released on December 15, 2015), can simulate holding a real book with two pages side by side. The availability of a pen / stylus can also lend itself to some interesting applications for casual users. Writing on the plastic surface of the Sony DPT-S1 feels closer to writing on actual paper compared to glass surfaces in other tablets.


Sony DPT-S1 - Not Necessarily an 'all work, no play' Device

Even though I try to avoid printing out documents / papers and read them on a computer monitor or tablet, I can't totally avoid the usage of a printer. Since purchasing the Sony DPT-S1 a couple of weeks back, I haven't printed out a single document. One of the aims of the Sony DPT-S1 is to reduce paper clutter. I have to say that it succeeds nicely in this respect.

Coming to the business end of the review, we will analyze the pros and cons of the Sony DPT-S1 first.

On the plus side:

  • The unit is lightweight, yet solid. The experience is very similar to carrying a folder with a few sheets of paper.
  • The unit has great ergonomics and is perfectly size for technical documents
  • It is a great vehicle to bring out the advantages of E-Ink
    • No strain on the eyes, thanks to the absence of backlighting
    • Visibility under bright light / outdoor environments is perfect
    • The battery life is great - more than a couple of weeks between charges even with regular use (2 - 3 hours a day with a page or so of writing on each day)
  • Annotation capabilities with the pen input is great for note taking and other business uses.
  • It reads all PDFs - no messing around with DRM, no proprietary file formats, no 'cloud' accounts needed
  • Combination of features make it a very unique product in the market

On the other side:

  • The exorbitant pricing ($800) makes it unsuitable for personal use. There exists better value for money if an E-Ink screen is not a must
  • The PDF viewer could do with some more features to make it more versatile / suitable for non-business use-cases. (more zooming, adjustable cropping to remove white margins etc.)
  • Firmware, in general, could do with some extra features - such as providing additional options for network shares along with the currently existing WebDAV support.
  • Limitations of E-Ink
    • Low refresh rate can hamper user experience when redrawing the screen during document navigation / zooming
    • Absence of color capabilities
  • Adding audio capabilities could help expand the addressable market (targeting audiobooks, for example)
  • At the $800 price point, the presence of just 4GB (3GB usable) of internal flash is disappointing. Availability of a microSD slot alleviates this issue somewhat.
  • A more powerful processor could help in providing a better user-experience with graphics-heavy PDFs.
  • Absence of contrast adjustment (something possible in the Kindle-DX) is a bit disappointing
  • There is no built-in light for reading in the dark (something available in the Kindle Paperwhite)
  • Wear-out of the pen tips could be a worry for heavy users
  • Navigation buttons at the bottom could do with a more pronounced feel. The current design (flush with the rest of the frame) is more suitable for capacitive touch-based implementations.

Despite the list of potential improvements and drawbacks being longer than the positives, the Sony DPT-S1 gets my recommendation for being a unique product in a specific niche. Products based on the 13.3" E-Ink Mobius screen have also been shown at tradeshows by companies like Netronix and Pocketbook, but they remain vaporware.

If the characteristics of E-Ink screens fit your requirements and you need a size-for-size replacement for traditional paper documents, the Sony Digital Paper System DPT-S1 is the perfect fit. It does a surprisingly great job despite being the only such product in the market. We hope Sony continues to provide firmware updates for the product and bring the price down even further.

Software and UI Aspects
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  • Denithor - Friday, December 18, 2015 - link

    I wasn't sure if he was referring to TinTin or Asterix. Both great memories from my childhood!!
  • Guspaz - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    Full-colour e-ink seems to be a long way off: their existing colour solution (Triton) just sticks colour filters in front of monochrome eInk, and looks terrible even in their marketing. They have a three-pigment solution called Spectra that doesn't look too bad, but it sacrifices grayscale to do it: each pixel can only do full black, full white, or full red. Doing full colour would likely require five pigments (CMYK and white), and it doesn't sound like that approach could do it.

    The closest we might ever get is a combination of Spectra with localized pigments, such that you have a pattern of pixels that include some black/white/cyan, some black/white/magenta, and some black/white/yellow: that would let you do full colour in a vaguely similar manner to how CMYK printing does.

    The problem is that, as far as I know, eInk has never made a display that is anything other than a single uniform sheet of eInk, meaning that the entire sheet is just tiny little granules (of random size, if you've ever seen a macro shot) that are smaller than individual pixels. Any pixel or segment structure on eInk screens comes purely from the active matrix grid they stick on it...
  • phoenix_rizzen - Tuesday, December 29, 2015 - link

    Mirasol would probably be a better alternative. Has similar properties to e-ink, only needing power to change pixel state, not to retain an image; doesn't use a backlight; etc. But in colour.
  • Shadowmaster625 - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    So when will we have devices that can swtich between standard display and E-Ink modes?
  • pedjache - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    I wouldn't hold my breath on such multi-mode display, but I wonder when do we see the first device incorporating both, in 10+ inch form factor. Like, you know, what Yotaphone1/2 does in a phone...
  • name99 - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    That depends on the meaning of "device" and "switch" :-)

    If you're generous in your definitions, we have that today:
    http://www.amazon.com/popSLATE-Second-Screen-iPhon...
  • Murloc - Friday, December 18, 2015 - link

    that's pretty much impossible unless one of the screens is transparent and very thin.
  • Shadow7037932 - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    Ouch, that price. If this was around $200-250, I'd strongly consider it since this has a stylus and I take a lot of notes at work. Currently, I use a Surface Pro 2 which works great, but this has much better battery life and works as a fine substitute for a paper notepad.
  • ironwing - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    Can you provide a list of file formats the device can display? The review discusses pdf files exclusively.
  • ganeshts - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    The device supports PDF only.

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