I just caught this via an article on Wired News:<br><br>Dual-Screen Device Combines E-Reader, Netbook<br><a href="http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2009/10/edge-e-reader-netbook/">http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2009/10/edge-e-reader-netbook/</a><br>
<br>The company's web site has this to say:<br><br>The enTourage eDGe™ is the world’s first dualbook, combining the functions of an e-reader,
netbook, notepad, and audio/video recorder and player in one. It’s a comprehensive device that
lets you read e-books, surf the Internet, take digital notes, send emails and instant messages,
watch movies and listen to music anywhere, at any time. This is nothing you've ever seen before!
Get books wirelessly, move files onto your enTourage eDGe™ using an SD card or a USB flash drive.
And with a netbook built in, you can forget the limitations of other e-readers, the enTourage
eDGe™ does it all!
<br><br><a href="http://www.entourageedge.com/entourage-edge.html">http://www.entourageedge.com/entourage-edge.html</a><br><br>This weird hybrid runs on Google Android, but I imagine it could boot Sugar on one of the screens. The product is positioned as an ebook that's secondarily a netbook with virtual on-screen and optional Bluetooth keyboard. They compare this device to other ebooks like the Kindle DX at a time when there is a price war brewing. By February, I'll wonder if their $490 price holds up in the marketplace. Along with the Asus dual screen prototype, it does look like the manufacturers are taking on NN's call to copy the XO-2 concept. This may force OLPC to innovate beyond.<br>
<br>Interestingly, the company is based in McLean, Virgina, so it would be easy to pay them a visit.<br><br>Mike<br>