So just to recap, at the moment we have bookmarks which are free, paper thin (because they're made of whatever piece of paper, ticket stub, etc. I have around) barely stick out from book but can stay with it, and feather light. When I start reading and stop reading I simply move it to another page. I can and do own dozens with at least one stuck in many books. I can have multiple in one book. They physically bring me to my last-read page.
Instead this is something expensive, thick, with a battery that could ignite and a knob I must turn, protrudes a lot and/or I must carry separately, slow to resume and slow to save.
This doesn't read like an April Fool's joke. This reads like an Onion or SNL skit mocking the tech industry. What am I missing?
I can't overstate how important it is that a real bookmark stores itself by simply tucking it somewhere else in the book while I'm reading. A titanium dongle with a battery in it can't beat that for UX....
"The first AI bookmark" - and the site doesn't seem to mention AI once, as far as I can tell. Seems like a very fancy and overbuilt input method for a gamify-reading app, and not a lot more.
[+] [-] Arainach|1 year ago|reply
Instead this is something expensive, thick, with a battery that could ignite and a knob I must turn, protrudes a lot and/or I must carry separately, slow to resume and slow to save.
This doesn't read like an April Fool's joke. This reads like an Onion or SNL skit mocking the tech industry. What am I missing?
[+] [-] joe5150|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] number_six|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] philomath_mn|1 year ago|reply
- Looks like you turn the knob to set your page
- This, and your book title, appear to be the only input data to the system (no other sensors)
- Does this mean they aim to have a database of the text of every edition of every book, indexed by page?
If they can pull it off I think it could be useful, but I think they will need to compromise on quality if they hit copyright issues.
[+] [-] msephton|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] saaaaaam|1 year ago|reply
Is it some sort of device that scans the text in physical books and then create AI cliff notes?
Because if so, I imagine they will be sued out of existence by publishers pretty fast.
[+] [-] roughly|1 year ago|reply
> Yet, while print remains king, it lacks what digital tools offer: engagement, accessibility, and efficiency.
Guys, that’s not a flaw, that’s the _sales pitch_.
[+] [-] philomath_mn|1 year ago|reply
If this could help me with review or highlight collection then I'd be happy with it.
[+] [-] littlekey|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] camtarn|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] anarticle|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] tolerance|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] holistio|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] hammeiam|1 year ago|reply