A reader to rival Amazon’s Kindle
Amazon’s e-book readers are stirring interest in the electronic document format, and iRiver has obviously decided to play it safe with its first crack at this market by aping the layout and dimensions of the Kindle 2.
The iRiver Story sports a 6in electronic ink display showing eight grey levels at 800 x 600 resolution, and a full Qwerty keyboard with dedicated menu and media keys between two page-turning shortcut buttons.
For the most part the controls are very responsive and easy to use, but the shortcut keys are a little too low to access comfortably with your hands in their natural position.
The base sports a mini-USB connection, power/hold switch, a 3.5mm jack for attaching headphones and an SD-card reader. The 2GB of internal memory would seem like more than enough for a good collection of documents (enough for around 1,500 books) , but the fact that the SD-card slot can expand this by an additional 16GB shows that iRiver has catered well for those who enjoy audio books or listening to music while reading.
Supported formats The Story supports the popular ePub format, PDF, DOC and TXT along with PowerPoint and Excel documents. The last two may be of particular interest to business users but, although viewing a series of PowerPoint slides is quite effective, particularly in landscape mode, we were not so pleased with its handling of Excel files.
Most users would find all but the most basic of spreadsheets far too complex to view comfortably on the Story’s screen and it’s not possible to zoom in the traditional sense. Instead, the display simply focuses on a specific group of cells at a time, shifting the focus as you turn pages.
In fact, it loses points in almost any situation where you’re not simply reading for enjoyment and this is generally down to the poor refresh rate. Browsing through Excel spreadsheets, collections of photos and large Word documents and PDFs that aren’t formatted for use with e-book readers can be a pain, since there’s a three or four second delay when browsing menus, zooming, loading files or turning pages. During this time the screen flashes black before the new image is displayed, which can be quite distracting.






