Got a tip for us? Send it to our anonymous, top-secret tip line: tips@crunchgear.com »
Copia Plans Low-Cost 7″ And 10″ Tablets As Well As E-Ink Devices
  • 8 Comments
by Devin Coldewey on July 29, 2010


Just a couple hours ago, news broke of the $99 Copia Wave5 e-reader, or tablet, or whatever you want to call a 5″ LCD-based device focused on reading. That isn’t the extent of the lineup, however: Copia has two more LCD-based tablets coming out soon, as well as two E-ink-based readers with Kindle-esque designs.

As they’ve said since their CES debut, the draw is supposed to be their unique social platform, which allows a community of readers to exchange reviews, recommendations, and so on — and although it will start as an exclusive to Copia-branded devices, they’re trying to go OEM and make the Copia service the premier social layer for e-books.

In addition to the devices I am about to go over, I am told that iPad, Windows 7, and Android apps are planned for later in the year, in addition to a browser-accessible web app. Whether the Copia app and service can survive alongside the popular Kindle app (as well as all the others, like Kobo) is difficult to say, but as I have noted, consumers want as little fragmentation as possible in their experience. This isn’t helping, as well-meaning and possibly useful as it is.

They’re trying to hook into existing social networks, which may accelerate things, but it may also accelerate the “social fatigue” we discussed. Only time will tell, and luckily Copia is backed by its parent company, DMC Worldwide, and may be able to weather the initial period of slow growth that tends to accompany social networks.

On to the devices. First is the Wave5, which was announced today sans specs. We’ll include it here for completeness’ sake. Prices are not final.



Wave5 and Wave7
5″ or 7″ capacitive touchscreen LCD (800×480)
64MB RAM and 2GB onboard storage
SD card slot
Mono speaker and 3.5mm headphone jack
Supports most audio and image formats, plus ePub, TXT, and PDF
6.7oz and 12oz respectively
MSRP: $99.99, $129.99 respectively


Ocean Color
10.1″ 16:9 capacitive multi-touch LCD (1024×600, GPU accelerated)
512MB RAM and 4GB onboard storage
SD card slot, 2xUSB 2.0
Stereo speakers, 3.5mm headphone and mic jacks
Tilt sensor
Wi-Fi, browser, e-mail client, IM
Supports MP3, AAC, WMA, MPEG-4 and WMV video, most image formats, plus ePub, HTML, TXT, PRC, PDF
1.12lb (18oz)
MSRP: $299.99


Tidal
6″ E-ink display (800×600, 16-stage greyscale, portrait or landscape mode)
2GB onboard storage
SD card slot
Wi-Fi (optional, $10 extra)
3.5mm headphone jack
Supports MP3, AAC, WMA, most image formats, plus ePub, HTML, TXT, PRC, PDF
9.3oz
MSRP: $149.99

Do these things stand a chance? The platform is still in beta, so I don’t want to say anything about it without giving it a shot first, but the tablets are at least competitive with existing low-cost hardware (though their processors aren’t mentioned, a bad sign). The omission of Wi-Fi from the Wave5 and Wave7 might be murder, though; for a pure e-reader, the new Kindle seems to school them. If they had e-mail and a browser, however limited, that would be a selling point against Amazon’s 900-pound (or however many pounds idiom requires) e-book gorilla. At least they’re not bad-looking, as I am forced to point out their old lineup certainly was.

The idea of a social platform for reading is slightly abhorrent to me, but then again, I don’t use Twitter, and I collect centuries-old editions of books no one else reads. I’m not the target market. Distributing these at Walmart where bestseller reading groups can see them, and creating a grassroots community that way, could be possible — but it’s tricky with all the competition out there, and the lowest-cost readers are slightly confusing in their object. Tablet or e-book device? As Amazon has observed, most books are in black and white; the benefits of color are doubtful for most users (certainly not for all).

If Copia can get a foot in the door and make their platform an OEM solution, good for them. But first they have to find the door.

Advertisement

Comments rss icon

  • Already the 6″ e-reader with wi-fi (at $160) is $20 more than the new Kindle. What happened to the nice 9″ ones they promised on their web page?
    http://www.thecopia.com/ereader.html

  • Once again it becomes very clear that the Nook is the best e-Ink reader on the market.

  • It’s easy to lower your price point when you’ve NEVER EVEN RELEASED A PRODUCT. How is this getting attention? That’s like me saying, “Hey, the turd I’m about to drop tomorrow will sell for $5.00.” And these e-readers seem to be as worth as much. It’s all words and no proof. As written:

    “As they’ve said since their CES Debut…”
    “I am told that iPad, Windows 7, and Android apps are planned for later in the year.”
    “First is the Wave5, which was announced today sans specs.”

    Or take the people that are still trying to get a beta invite for the social service. Courtesy of the latest Twitter feed on copia’s homepage: “Jason R. Davis – @TheCopia I have tried to submit to your beta through your site, but the link seems to be broken.”

    Or maybe compare these vapor images of the e-readers to the ones on the site right now: http://www.thecopia.com/ereader.html

    DIdn’t bother to update the homepage?

    Or…maybe get in line for that turd that goes on sale tomorrow?

  • Has anyone noticed a new Chinese (multilingual) e-reader + multimedia player + FM called Gemei GM2000 on sale for $159.99 at http://www.ownta.com/gemei-gm2000-colour-e-book-reader-with-7.0-inch-touch-screen-and-hdmi-function-4gb-pre-order.html

    No Wi-Fi or 3G. 7″ 800×480 pixels touch screen. Up to 1920x1080p playback. HDMI and TV output.

  • I want to know when will the Copia Ereader(Wave, Tidel, and Ocean series) be release date? But no one know when but release in the Fall? But Last Jan, they told that they will be release in the Spring? That was 8 months ago! Why delay?

Leave Comment

Commenting Options

Enter your personal information to the left, or sign in with your Facebook account by clicking the button below.

Alternatively, you can create an avatar that will appear whenever you leave a comment on a Gravatar-enabled blog.

Trackback URL
Short URL
bugbug