Cool Hunting

Plustek V100 BookReader by Tim Yu

plustekbookreaderscanner.jpg

Plustek's new v100 BookReader is an optical scanner device with built-in character recognition. Plustek comments, the V100 "transforms printed words into audio output, that can be saved in MP3 format for future access. With the press of one button, the Plustek BookReader will convert printed text into high quality speech with a lifelike voice."

Available for purchase for $700 from Plustek, you could have an automated bedtime reader for your kids.

Read more at Fast Company.

Tools
Print
Email
Save / Bookmark
fShare Share
Permanent link
Sphere It
This entry posted on 20 February 2009 at 7:14 PM
previous entry
Sydney Garden Gnome House
next entry
Tiny Love Toys
Related Entries
Advertisement
Sound Unbound Book Talk and Benefit
DJ Spooky has had one foot in music and another in academia over the years and the release earlier this year of his new book "Sound Unbound: Sampling Digital Music and Culture" is no exception. The "literary mixtape" is a collection of "reports from the front lines on the role of sound and digital media in an information-based society." Tasking authors, musicians, designers, curators...
Cool Hunting Video Presents: Fashionable Technology
A massage-based video game controller, panties with wings and an inflatable dress were just a few of the concepts exhibited recently at the NYC gallery Eyebeam to launch Sabine Seymour's new book "Fashionable Technology." In this video, we interview Sabine about the burgeoning field and her lifelong obsession with fashion. She also helps us peruse the exhibit, chatting with the designers and artists behind...
NASA Create the Future Design Contest
Roads that produce electricity from the kinetic energy of cars, DNA-scanning ballot boxes to wipe out voter fraud, superbly energy-efficient houses (pictured right) to stave off the impending energy crisis... these are some of the entries vying for the $20,000 prize offered by NASA in the Create the Future Design Contest While the entry date has come and gone, there are literally hundreds of...
Wired NextFest 2007
From ideas that ran from the creepy (like regenerated body parts including bladders) to conceptually fascinating (like a harp with strings made from lasers and a Lifestraw that kills sinister infectious organisms in water upon contact), over 160 exhibitors at the 4th annual Wired NextFest in Los Angeles this past weekend enthusiastically revealed their visions of the future to receptive nerds of all ages....
Recent Cool Hunting Videosview all Cool Hunting Videos
Advertisement
Advertisement
Recent Entries

Riva Yachts


Bike Rides Exhibition


Academy of Art Collection Fashion Week Spring 2010


Cool Hunting Video Presents: Rye Rye
London Design Guide 2010


Olaf Breuning: Color Studies


Bernhard Willhelm: Keep It Unreal Collection


Anniel Sport Shoes and Bags


Babelgum Metropolis Art Prize 2009