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Qtel launches Cisco telepresence facility

A new electronic display is poised to challenge power-hungry LCDs after U.S. mobile chip maker Qualcomm Inc. teamed up with a South Korean bookseller to introduce a new e-reader.
The “Kyobo eReader” was unveiled last week in Seoul and will reach South Korean consumers as early as Thursday, Kyobo Book Centre officials said.
The e-reader features Qualcomm’s 1.0-gigahertz “Snapdragon” processor, a custom Kyobo application based on Android and a 5.7-inch “XGA” mirasol display.
The mirasol display uses ambient light instead of its own in much the same way that a peacock’s plumage gets its scintillating hues. Qualcomm’s mirasols have already been used in a few Chinese and South Korean phones and in an MP3 player on the U.S. market. The display contains tiny mirrors that consume power only when they’re moving, easing battery drain. Mirasol displays also quickly change from one image to the next and show video.
The global market for e-readers is dominated by bright LCDs and grayscale “e-ink” screens. LCDs consume relatively more battery power while e-ink screens are slow to refresh.
The introduction of the e-reader jointly developed by Qualcomm and Kyobo signals increasing competition in the global market for tablets.
U.S. online retailer Amazon.com Inc. and bookseller Barnes & Noble Inc. have recently released tablets of their own, Kindle Fire and Nook Tablet, and are challenging Apple’s iPad in pricing.
Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs noted South Koreans’ near-100 percent literacy rate and digital reading skills during a launching ceremony in Seoul last Tuesday, according to the San Diego company. Fifteen-year-old South Koreans scored highest in their ability to absorb information from digital devices, according to a 2009 study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. More than 80 percent of households in South Korea have broadband Internet access.

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