Hot tip: never use a flathead screwdriver to pry stuff, always use a plastic spudger or you'll chew up the plastic or paint no matter how careful you are and it'll look a bloody mess.

With the butt meat removed, the holes are exposed. There are three more tiny Philips screws inside, these ones are longer with a coarser thread, put them somewhere separate to the others.

With those three screws out, the case is free to flex.

Oh my GOD how swollen-up is this lithium battery

am i about to die

The cat appears, pet her until she goes away
With the cat satisfied, we can begin removing the top of the ereader, same thing, spudge it with your spudger until it spudges off

The slidey power switch also fails to fall out.

Normally when you take apart a thing that has button on the outside, all the buttons fall off. Not so with this, because in 2007 these were Rich People's Toys and the design and build quality is *chef's kiss*

Lesson: better to buy something that was Excellent secondhand than to spend the same money on something shit from Now

These two clippydoodads gotta come out, they're held in weakly with an adhesive and will come out fairly easily
Here's what they look like Out

So here comes the interesting part.

The case of these things is All One Piece. It's a just-thick-enough-to-feel-expensive aluminium sleeve that doesn't get in the way and is fairly unremarkable until one day you look all around for the seam where this was bending-brake'd out of sheet metal and THERE ISN'T ONE and you go "What the... how the hell was this made?"

And then you put that question out of your mind because you're distracted by your swollen battery.

See, I should be able to just reach in and pull the whole innards out of this aluminium sleeve in one go like a magician or an overenthusiastic butcher, but that battery's all Big and it's gonna make things complicated, so we've gotta cross our fingers and do the careful wiggleypush

A five-second flourish becomes a fifteen-minute session of sweating and cursing and hoping that the screen and various fragile electronic parts can withstand being mushed up HARD between an aluminium case and a VERY ANGRY BATTERY
Wiggle so gently and carefully

Don't you pop you bastard don't you pop

At this point, when you're about to expose the battery against a harsh aluminium transition, start thinking "Maybe I should be doing this outside"

but it's cold

Gotta lift up this connector flap to release the ribbon cable that connects to the case's buttons WHICH STILL HAVEN'T FALLEN OUT

Sony helpfully glued a massive transparent plastic chunk to the lifty-uppy part of the connector here

With the ribbon cable detached we're free to continue bringing out the ereader's innards. Any minute now we'll expose the battery
holy SHIT
LOOK AT THIS ANGRY BOY

It's hard to tell what's going on in this picture but this is taken from the top of the ereader looking down, once the battery's free of the aluminium.

The whole rest of the ereader just made the sound your uncle makes after he loosens his belt after thanksgiving. It's going aaaauuuuuhhhhhhhhh that's better

you can't put out a lithium fire by the way, just reminding y'all of that

See if you puncture a lithium battery you run a good chance of shorting it internally, these are basically made the same way as capacitors or jam roly poly's, you get dissimilar foils and spread some electrolyte jam on them and fold them over and over each other to make a pouch battery like this or roll them up to make a round battery like an 18650, you stick something in there then the foils touch and all the stored energy gets un-stored, it sometimes goes BANG or WHOOMPH or SPRRRRRKKKKRRRFSSSSHHHH but you can't put it out, it shoots out very hot flames and water makes it angrier, anyway this is glued in place so you gotta take your spudger and just jam it in there underneath, just stab it, lever it, wiggle it, take hold of it in your fingers and yank on it, just really go to town
Replacement battery on the left looking normal and respectable, on the right is the one I just levered out with a spudger, it's not happy about it
Carry the battery by its tail and tell it well if you're going to be like THAT then YOU can go OUTSIDE

The ereader with no clothes on.

Come on, this is no surprise, you know the sort of thing people read on these things when nobody can see the cover and judge you for it in the dentist's waiting room

I bet I broke the screen wrestling with it to try to get that massive battery out

Haha I didn't break the screen!

To reassemble, follow previous steps in reverse order

(for avoidance of doubt do not go back outside and get the dangerpillow and glue it back in again)

And there we have it, one perfectly working gorgeous ereader, ready for another million pages!

Got some folk coming round for a back porch hangout so I put the battery in the grill while I figure out what to do with it

Continuation of ereader battery replacement thread: I replaced the battery in my own ereader too (it's the same PRS-505 but in black), and I would like to remind you that we thought about batteries very differently back in 2007.

Did you forget that in 2007 you didn't have to plug your phone in every night? Remember the INDIGNITY you felt when you bought your first colour phone or even smartphone, and it sucked so much energy that you had to turn the screen off when you weren't using it?

Anyway, I put in a new battery and charged it five days ago, read for a couple of hours every day, and can report that last night the battery display dropped from four bars to three.

So that's probably three weeks between charges aye. On a 750mAh battery smaller than a box of tic-tacs.

Look what they've stolen from us. Demand better. We deserve better.

I must be thoroughly Ebook Brained now because I'm actually starting to enjoy using Calibre
I gotta do like a Big Thread about this sometime on my blog that I don't have, but for now I've gotta say, Actually Making The Effort to use the e-reader rather than my phone for reading books has paid me dividends in Chill

Like seriously what was I thinking owning a vintage unwifi'd ereader and not using it, just using my phone instead

🦝 Let's settle down and have a nice read of a long book! Gee, I sure hope I don't get distracted from this book, for example by a distraction machine, much like the one that I'm holding in my hand right now, and staring at,

Anyway look what just turned up at my house lol

I only bought this for the cover, but I bid a fiver for this and two broken Android tablets and nobody else put a bid in so I got this gorgeous boy for 99 cents plus a fiver to post it.

Shame about the touchscreen, not NEARLY enough buttons on this thing, but it's a gorgeous colour and it's got that reassuring Sony Aluminium Heft to it

The case has a built-in flip-out popup booklight! Featuring some incredibly crappy 2008-era icy blue LEDs, boo

You could legitimately accuse me of hoarding these things

...if anybody else had bid

The UI and general Experience Of Using The Device is CONSIDERABLY worse on the touch-enabled one. Whereas on the 505 every menu item had a line on the display and a corresponding button, this 600 has its interactable parts of the screen appearing without rhyme or reason in a layout that doesn't seem very thoroughly thought out.

Honestly, touchscreens aren't really good for most things

🦝 Alright, time to distribute some of these ereaders, I'd better write a quick guide on how to make new ebooks work on vintage ereaders

🕛
🕐
🕑
🕒

🦝 Well this turned into a gibbering manifesto

Everyone who's ever bought an ebook or borrowed one legally from the library: 🐧 Oh Dan, I'm so sorry, I've been there and I know it's an awful mess

Everyone who's ever pirated an ebook: 🐴 Huh? What's the problem, it's easy

🐴 Dan, this is supposed to be a quick guide on how to read ebooks, do you really need to include so many thousand-word tangents on corporate greed

🦝 It is a hard thing to write a Bullshit Removal Guide without mentioning The Bullshit to be removed

See, the root of the problem here is that publishers hate ebooks and would rather they didn't exist at all.

Ebooks are a threat to publishers because making physical books and distributing them at scale requires a large staff, lots of very expensive equipment and a network of business relationships built up over literally centuries, whereas making ebooks and distributing them at scale requires one dipshit, a computer, six cups of tea and some muttered cursing

🦝 Wow, this handheld portable machine with a screen and a microprocessor is so good for my mental health

🦝 Thank you #gameDad, #pinePhone, #eReader (#butSpecificallyAnOldEReaderWithButtonsThatDoesNotGoOnTheInternet) for being nice fidgety little devices that can go in my pockets and bring me harmless joys throughout the day

📱 Aw thanks Dan, I didn't expect

🦝 Not you

🦝 Wow, maybe we don't have to abandon all technology and return to the forest after all, maybe it's just phones that are shit
📱 I didn't even get a hashtag :(

I don't know who needs to hear this right now, with the spring rain and the blossoms on the trees and the animals being all excitable and the general Spring Energy going on, but there's a plugin for Calibre called FanFicFare that downloads stories from a variety of websites (including that one) and makes them vintage-ereader-friendly

(full list of supported sites at https://github.com/JimmXinu/FanFicFare/wiki/SupportedSites)

SupportedSites

FanFicFare is a tool for making eBooks from stories on fanfiction and other web sites. - JimmXinu/FanFicFare

GitHub

Adding on to the ereader thread to say that I was strolling through eBay and saw this thing
https://www.ebay.com/itm/167504233404

And I thought, "Now that there's an aesthetic that SOMEONE on Fedi will absolutely wet their knickers over"

(I didn't buy it because I've just spent a frankly embarrassing amount of money on a red PRS-505)

Ectaco JetBook Red - Working, Good Condition - Plus... | eBay

Ectaco Jetbook Red - Working, Good Condition - Plus Original Pouch. What you see pictured is exactly what you'll get. A working, red Ectaco JetBook. The JetBook has an SD slot and and an older miniUSB slot (not microUSB) for loading books and charging the battery.

eBay
HAHA WHICH ONE OF YOU GOT IT

Come on fess up, two minutes after I post it here it's suddenly sold lol

Whichever one of y'all snagged that up, you better do a thread on it

In other news, Ectaco seems like a cool company? They make ebook readers (with page turn buttons - less than they used to it seems, but there's still at least a page-forward and page-back button and those're the important ones) and translation devices and their website looks like it was made in 2003, and not in a bad way either.

Here's one of their translators. You can't tell from the picture but it's on the bigger end of phone-sized.

Damn I wish this company made phones. I'd have a phone like that.

Looking through Ectaco's website and having a little yearning sigh moment of "Ohhhh, I wanna go and work at that company..."

VTech (the toy company) was the other company in the last decade or so I've felt that way about (I was just that impressed with their offline kiddy smartwatch that it made me go "Oh, I'd vibe with these people.").

(which is high praise 'cause I'm rabidly self-employed)

🦝: Taking time to organize thousands of ebooks and compress them such that they can all fit in a low-power offline ereader from 2007

🐰 is this a trauma response after the storm that cut off everyone's power for half a week

🦝 What? Pfft no

🐰 OK fair enough

🦝 *whispering* it's a trauma response to eeeeeverythiiiii

Folk who got their asses bitten off by Kindles are now looking for new ereaders, I see them asking which are good, their requirements are that it has to run android, I wipe the spat-out tea off my monitors and try to calm down,

"Those cheap ones off aliexpress might not get software updates" FFS SOFTWARE UPDATES

for BOOKS

wtf lad, like the update from when we went from scrolls to edge binding?!

Reading daily on a 2007 ereader has reminded me just how tiny text is and I don't think Modern Kids even know about file sizes

one black-and-white page of manga shrunk to fit this ereader's screen takes up as much space as a novella

you can fit fifteen novels in one second of video

a 4gb SD card of books would probably have me completely sorted out for reading material until it's time to die of old

Kids don't know about file sizes and hard drives and stuff because they never got, like we did, the leap from floppy disks to CD-ROMs.

The presenter on the telly would hold up the big thick phone book and say 🐹 isn't it remarkable that all this information can fit on one plastic square. But there's a new technology coming in! Inside this new plastic circle, you can fit ALL THIS!

And there'd be this massive overflowing pile of phone books, stack them into an armchair and sit in it, more than you could read in a decade, all in this one shiny miracle circle.

Tell kids about that today and they'll say what's a floppy disk, what's a CD-ROM, what's a file, what's a phone book, what's a telly and what's information

A one TERABYTE hard drive costs less than a day's minimum wage and yet everything lives on someone else's computer, what the heck

🐀 Dad's what's information

🦝 It's like misinformation but there's less of it and it's true

I don't think we've had a massive shift like that in the last few decades. Like, now you can get multi-terabyte hard drives for cheap and that's normal, but they kinda grew in size and dropped in price pretty smoothly, that's nothing like the jump from floppies to CDs in the 90's. We went from a megabyte and a half to 700 megs in one big jump just like that.

Then DVDs were like eight gigs and okay fine but that's only ten times as much, big whoop y'know. Blu-ray, 50 gigs on a dual layer, big deal, I lived through a 400x jump

Like, imagine if tomorrow someone put out a 400 terabyte hard drive for the same price as a 1tb one today

Just gonna download 76,000-odd books from Project Gutenberg and stick them on a memory card the size of my pinky nail that I can afford with the coins on my bedside table.

Just for a laugh. Just because I can. Hmm, lazy morning, let's casually spend a couple of hours grabbing more books than I could read in ten lifetimes, for free. All legally too.

I made the mistake of publicly saying that PRS-505 ereaders were really good and now even broken ones are like $150 on eBay, so please look at this to take the pressure off https://marx.engineer/zereader/
ZEReader - Building a hackable open-source EPUB Reader

marx.engineer - Embedded Systems and Electronics by Anna-Lena Marx - Yocto, Linux, AOSP, Electronics and Oscilloscopes

@ifixcoinops I miss my 505 so badly. it was the best.
@ifixcoinops Maybe storing English Text Wikipedia in another memory card, just to have two things with the same energy. https://dumps.wikimedia.org/enwiki/
Index of /enwiki/

@ifixcoinops
[sound of Calibre breathlessly choking in the background]
@ifixcoinops they have an account on here so you can make sure you’re not missing any interesting ‘new releases’ just in case you manage to run out @gutenberg_new

@ifixcoinops I remember from when floppies became too small for many files to when USB sticks came along, computer data heists in movies always had to be some made-up removable media the prop team came up with, because nothing people would be familiar with would be believable.

I just want one movie where they break in and then pull a long box of 3.5" floppies and a bunch of blank labels from their bag and get to copying.

@ifixcoinops Yeah, that particular jump was uniquely transformative, I really can't think of anything else like that in my lifetime.
@growlph @ifixcoinops
but the increase from the 90s to now has been quite impressive in many aspects of computing, some just increased more steadily.
I mean, in mainstream systems we have:
* >1000x as much RAM as we did 30 years ago (32MB used to be much, now 32GB is normal)
- more CPU cache now than RAM back then
* 16x as many CPU cores that each are each clocked >= 20x as high + massively higher IPC
* mass storage (HDD/SSD) is ~100x as fast and ~1000x the size
@growlph @ifixcoinops
And of course the reason why people don't store data locally despite all that: Internet speed went from 33.6kbit/s to hundreds of mbit/s (~10'000x 😲)

@Doomed_Daniel @ifixcoinops And, more cynically, because software has been explicitly designed to make local storage less convenient, to justify selling more cloud storage.

There is a good argument that this makes backup and multi-device synchronization easier for non-technical users, but this problem honestly isn't *that* hard to solve.

@growlph @ifixcoinops
Sure, it's enshittification enabled by technical improvements all around.

Software needs massively more power than it did to do basically the same thing because that power is there.
Widespread internet connections that are always on enabled more predatory licensing (even for software that still runs locally).
As you said, vendors try to lock you into their "cloud", possible because of internet speed.
Same for streaming services

@growlph @ifixcoinops
Really frustrating for our 90s brains that still scream THIS IS NOT WHAT WE DREAMED OF WHEN WE IMAGINED THAT MUCH POWER :-/
@growlph @ifixcoinops
"Oh god >= 50MBit upstream and flatrates? That'll be like a permanent LAN party over the internet! We could host Quake servers at home, have basically shared folders on the internet to share MP3s and DivX movies - the future is gonna be awesome!"
@Doomed_Daniel @ifixcoinops And I worry that the normalization of this has been successful. Like, I suspect I'd sound like a crazy person trying to explain to someone younger than broadband Internet why it's a Bad Thing that controlling the TV from the couch now involves a server farm in Virginia.
@Doomed_Daniel @ifixcoinops Absolutely, but CD-ROMs just started existing one day, and the new storage potential was so sudden we went wild trying to invent (usually stupid) use cases for all that data.

@ifixcoinops @growlph Then CDR and the swap from backing up one machine to many disks, to many machines to one disk.

Then shortly after: the reverse.

I reckon this is why everyone love someone else’s server. They can’t run df on it.

@wonkothesane @ifixcoinops I recall optical media being a staple of sci-fi for roughly a decade - it was so great we would *obviously* still be using it in 50 years.

@ifixcoinops ZIP and then JAZ drives were short-lived, but that 1.44MB to 100MB and later 1GB jump *just* as the WWW became multimedia, was the best damn thing ever.

Now I have stupid cheap thumb drives which hold 256 JAZ disks.

@ifixcoinops it’s density and latency and throughput that went crazy this decade. 8TB m.2 cards, and Lexar is shipping a 1TB “microSD Express”, microSD with about a gigabyte a second of reads.

@ifixcoinops

There were intermediate formats. Zip drives, super floppies, probably others. The problem was that everyone tried to have a monopoly on their format so nothing took off. Everyone kept using floppies until writable CDs and USB flash drives became affordable.

@suetanvil @ifixcoinops I still had 100MB ZIP disks as recently as ... hmm, when did I renovate the garage ... maybe 5 years ago? Haven't had a functioning ZIP *drive* in like 15 years, but still had the disks 😂
@ifixcoinops the last big shift was SSDs - 10x capacity decrease in exchange for 10x performance increase.

@ifixcoinops It was more gradual for me- I had a 44 mb Syquest drive, then a 100 mb Zip disk on my way between floppies and CD’s.

But It is nuts. I’m a hoarder, I have files that go back to 1998 when I brought my Perfoma 630 home from work after replacing it with a Power Center 604e. (Remember those?) And ALL of it fits - audio files from at least 40 multi-track recording sessions, 47,000 photographs, 40,000 MP3’s, a few dozen 1080p movies… and everything I’ve ever drawn and written on a 4tb NVME drive that fits in my pants pocket.

But no, there’s probably not going to be a 4tb to 400tb jump in one fell swoop. It’s a much more gradual ramp now, but the sizes are so astronomical it still seems vast.

@ifixcoinops
I bring you once again, this certified hit from neil cicierega

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mSHUIEDBbl4

Neil Cicierega - 300MB

Get the album here: http://www.neilcic.com/mouthmoods/

YouTube

@ifixcoinops I pay the same price now for 20ish TB drives that I was paying in 2015 for 4TB drives, that I was paying in 2010 for 500GB drives.

And they all come in the same form factor, like almost identical all the way down.

@ifixcoinops around ‘05, I was on a project with a huuuuge (150TB) fiber channel array. Million dollar price, couple meters of rackspace wide. I did some scribbles of mainframe disk storage in my first nerd years, so ‘back 27 years, now, fwd 27 years’ ==> in 2032 I want a terabyte in a $100 wrist device, which should yield low-fi voice-grade storage of many lifetimes of audio (I forget how many) via 1k/sec ACELP compression.

A terabyte microsd tapdances near $100, years ahead of my guess. And it’d hold the text of a college library.

@ifixcoinops That was driven by tech that needed storage that grew exponentially - CDs, then DVDs, then Bluray, and HD video recording. We seem to have plateaued at 4k stuff these days so there's no screaming mass demand for exponentially larger storage?

@Landwomble @ifixcoinops 8K video needs about 4x the storage of 4K, and more if it's using HDR rather than old-skool 32 bit colour, but it's not exponentially more and 8K is in any case cinema-equivalent resolution. We *might* go past that if AR glasses like Apple's Vision Pro catch on for movie-watching, but we're close to maxing out the bandwidth of the human eyeballs watching the show.

Of course, if you use LLMs for everything your storage requirements keep growing …

@cstross @ifixcoinops yeah I guess so l, just wasn't thinking 8k was commonplace yet, maybe I'm just out of touch
@Landwomble @ifixcoinops 8K is still unusual and expensive—and it's the resolution used in digital cinemas—but last time I looked for a new TV I saw 8K TVs on sale for low-single-digit thousands, which means before you can blink they'll be free with every pack of Rice Krispies (as long as you're okay with your smart TV watching you right back to track your eyeball movements during the manufacturer's ads).
@ifixcoinops
Also it cannot be automated away to a plagiarism machine
@ifixcoinops Indeed, convenience trumps cost for most. For me, E2E encryption is a happy medium.
@ifixcoinops I used to use the rudimentary web browser on the kindle to keep up with a heavily text-based message board I was on

@ifixcoinops Have you seen VTech’s switch & go toys? I wouldn’t have thought you could innovate in the transformer space, but they succeeded.

And so much of their product is just solidly competent toys that have infinite copycats on Amazon. But I feel like most parents think it’s just another alphabet soup Chinese manufacturer.

@josephholsten I kinda wanted to go work for them both because their toys were solid and also because it seemed like one of the only remaining places that still tried to cram lots of goodies into tiny amounts of memory. Like, they USE their techs' competence and experience rather than just putting in more expensive chips and having the already-skint parents pay extra y'know

Also everthing's humane and normal. Like I expected this smartwatch to start bugging me for a subscription or to sign up for something to get more updates or show my kid adverts or somehow start sucking in some way and it just... didn't

@ifixcoinops @josephholsten huh. vtech. the leaked 4.8mil kids' details due to none security vtech?

https://www.troyhunt.com/when-children-are-breached-inside/

Maybe they learned online = bad. I've not been super keen to let me wee one touch their kit. But ten years can change a lot aye. Your rec gives reason to revisit, thanks mate.

When children are breached – inside the massive VTech hack

I suspect we’re all getting a little bit too conditioned to data breaches lately. They’re in the mainstream news on what seems like a daily basis to the point where this is the new normal. Certainly the Ashley Madison debacle [https://www.troyhunt.com/2015/08/heres-what-ashley-madison-members-have.html]

Troy Hunt

@oeightsix @josephholsten dang, once bitten I guess. My littleun's had a bouncer, camera, globe, smartwatch and a couple other things from them and none have even the hardware to go online.

When I was plugging her (around 2022) smartwatch into my computer to put new games on it, it didn't even have me make an account or anything. Guess these are the actions of a company who learned their lesson the hard way lol

@ifixcoinops @josephholsten well whaddayaknow. Their watches and fisher price babby's first iPod Touch-alike are totally offline devices as you say.

That is genuinely nifty and refreshing when every other crack at kids watch is either 'please sign up for our atrocious overpriced proprietary monthly MVNO'd mobile service that doesn't even work from this company you've never heard of' or 'please sell what's left of your soul to us, the fruit company'

@ifixcoinops before I noticed details like the controls I 100% thought this was an e-reader installed inside an etch a sketch

I think it's deliberately copying the aesthetic, but they could have gone farther. How cool would it be to turn a knob to go back and forward in the book?

@ifixcoinops Oh! I owned one of these years ago (in black). Absolutely loved the physical key placement and the weird bulge on the back. The page turn buttons in the bottom left were just *perfect*.

Super comfy device, I must have read a hundred books on mine while selling plasma in college.

Edit: I didn't wet my knickers but it was a close thing.

@ifixcoinops I used to use that but found https://github.com/dteviot/WebToEpub to be easier to use
GitHub - dteviot/WebToEpub: A simple Chrome (and Firefox) Extension that converts Web Novels (and other web pages) into an EPUB.

A simple Chrome (and Firefox) Extension that converts Web Novels (and other web pages) into an EPUB. - dteviot/WebToEpub

GitHub
@sdubinsky dang that's also neat as hell
@sdubinsky @ifixcoinops To add another option the one I've used for long reads to download and read later with the ebook. It's a more generic one.
https://dotepub.com/?lang=en
dotepub — download any webpage as an e-book

Tool for automatic conversion to the main e-book formats: bookmarklet, Chrome, Firefox, Safari and Edge extension, widget and API