Onyx Boox How To Install Dictionary In Ubuntu

Device: ONYX BOOX M96C I was able to extract the kernel configuration from the running android system and, after searching around, i found the same kernel version 3.0.35 (but obiviously without onyx patches).


Review Date: October 2017 – Review unit purchased from Banggood.com

Overview

The Onyx Boox N96 is a line of 9.7-inch E Ink ereaders from Onyx. There are several variations of the N96. The older versions have E Ink Pearl screens and the newer ones have E Ink Carta displays, the latter has darker blacks and a lighter background for improved contrast.

Some versions of the N96 have a capacitive touchscreen for finger touch, and others only support stylus touch. There’s also a dual touch model that supports both, but it lacks a frontlight.

The specific model reviewed here is the Onyx Boox N96ML Carta+. This model combines a frontlight with a stylus touchscreen. Personally I would have preferred to get a model with a frontlight and capacitive touchscreen, but so far that model only exists with an outdated Pearl screen, and the Carta screens looks better so I’m glad I went with it.

One thing to note, I purchased the Boox N96ML from Banggood, a Chinese wholesale website. It took about 2 weeks to arrive from China. At the time it was on sale and cheaper than the one sold on Amazon so that’s why I ordered it from there instead. It came with a cover that automatically wakes and puts the ereader to sleep, and it also came with a secondary hard travel case with a zipper that is quite nice, but the hard case wasn’t mentioned in the description, only the PU case, so I was surprised it came with it. The ones on Amazon don’t mention anything about coming with a cover at all so keep that in mind.

Onyx Boox N96 Review

Pros

  • Wide range of features, including audio support and text-to-speech, with multiple reading apps to choose from.
  • Frontlight looks good, surprisingly even on the larger display.
  • The 9.7-inch E Ink Carta screen looks great, and is a nice option for PDFs.
  • Solid build quality and the design is much nicer than the previous M96 models.

Cons

  • Heavy.
  • User interface confusing and unintuitive.
  • Sometimes random lines appear when writing on screen with stylus.
  • Most 3rd-party apps either don’t work well or are incompatible with such an old version of Android.

Verdict

The Onyx Boox N96 is a much cheaper alternative to the Sony DPT-RP1 and Remarkable, and the software is a lot more advanced for PDFs and ebooks, but there are some drawbacks. The touchscreen and operating system have some quirks and the device is rather heavy, but the Carta display looks good, and it’s nice to have a frontlight on a larger screen. If you’re looking for a good PDF reader the N96 fits the bill, but don’t expect most 3rd-party apps to work well if at all.

Onyx Boox N96ML Video Review

Hardware and Design

Looking back at the previous generation Onyx Boox M96, a lot of the hardware features remain the same, but the N96 comes with some notable upgrades.

First off, the overall design is much nicer and the build quality is better. The M96 felt like cheap plastic and made creaking noises just handling it normally. The N96 on the other hand feels very solid and it has a classier design with an aluminum back, and it adds a loop on the top right to hold the stylus.

It has four buttons, two for paging forward and back, one for going back, and one for menu. If you hold the back button you can turn the frontlight on and off, and if you hold the menu button you can force a full page refresh.

On the bottom edge there’s a power button, a microSD card slot, a 3.5mm headphone jack, a USB port, a microphone, and around the back edge there’s a small speaker.

Screen and Frontlight

The resolution of the 9.7-inch screen is 1200 x 825, for 150 ppi, but the contrast is quite a bit better on the newer Carta screens, the background is lighter and text is darker than the older Pearl screens.

What I really like about the Onyx Boox N96ML is the fact that it has a frontlight. The N96 is the only ereader with a larger screen that has a frontlight. The light helps make it more useful without having to rely on external lighting, and you can turn the light off when you don’t need it. Plus the light helps improve contrast by making the background lighter.

I was surprised by how even the frontlight is on the N96; there aren’t any weird cones or shadows. I had assumed even frontlighting would be more difficult to achieve with larger displays, but that’s not the case at all. The only negative is there’s a brighter strip that’s visible on the right side of the screen near the buttons. It’s hard to notice with the light at lower levels, but it stands out with the brightness turned up. It seems like the light layer doesn’t go far enough under the bezel to hide this strip, probably because the buttons are in the way.

Touchscreen

This version of the Onyx Boox N96 supports stylus touch only. It uses an electromagnetic stylus with a hard plastic tip that doesn’t seem to wear down like the Sony and Remarkable styluses. The downside with that is it doesn’t feel anything like writing on paper, as those two devices do. It feels like writing on hard plastic with a slight rubbery quality.

The speed of writing with the stylus is faster than I expected. It’s actually faster to respond than the Sony DPT-RP1, but not quite as fast as the Remarkable. The stylus has no battery so it doesn’t need charging and you can flip it over and use the other end as an eraser.

For the most part the stylus is accurate, but sometimes random jagged lines appear when writing on the screen. Also the touchscreen is prone to ghost touches, sometimes activating something I haven’t touched. The touchscreen works well at times but overall it’s quirky and less reliable than other touchscreens.

One big negative is if you ever lose or break the stylus, the device becomes pretty much useless. You can use the page buttons as arrows to move a cursor on the screen and open the menu but there’s inexplicably no way to select things without using the touchscreen so button navigation is completely pointless.

Size

Download Dictionary

With a 9.7-inch display, the N96 is a lot bigger than a typical 6-inch ereader like a Kindle. It’s also a lot heavier. It feels like a solid brick.

At 480 grams, the N96 is quite a bit heavier than the 13.3-inch Sony DPT-RP1 (349 grams) and 10.3-inch Remarkable (350 grams), both of which use lighter and more durable plastic-based screens instead of glass. Since I’ve been using those two devices lately, the weight difference seems greater than it is. While the N96 feels really heavy to me now, the Kindle DX was 55 grams heavier, so the N96 is far from the heaviest ereader I’ve reviewed.

Other Details

The N96 has Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. It supports audio and text-to-speech. It has a headphone jack and built-in speaker. The speaker isn’t very loud and it doesn’t sound very good but it’s there.

For storage it comes with 16GB of internal space (about 12GB usable) and there’s a microSD card slot for cards up to 32GB. It has 1GB of RAM and the usual 1GHz single-core processor so speed isn’t its strong suit and some patience is required.

Battery life seems to be pretty good with the 3000mAh battery, but it’s hard to tell after just a few weeks of usage. It probably lasts 1-2 weeks on average.

Software

The Onyx Boox N96 runs Android 4.0.4. At this point that’s both an advantage and a disadvantage.

It’s an advantage in the sense that the software is open to installing Android apps to further enhance the functionality, and it comes with Google Play to install apps, but it’s a disadvantage by being such an old and outdated version of Android. Most apps either don’t work with Android 4.0 or they don’t work well with E Ink period.

After trying to install the new Kindle app and having it crash repeatedly, and not having any way to install Dropbox on this version of Android, I decided I’m not going to use any third-party apps on the N96. If you can live with that compromise the N96 is pretty good at what it does.

It has four reading apps built-in, including OReader, FBReader, Neo Reader, and Neo Reader v2.

Other apps pre-loaded on the N96 include a web browser, calculator, calendar, clock, dictionary, email, gallery, music, notes, reading stats, search, and sound recorder.

eReading Features

Depending on which app you’re using, there are a number of reading features, especially when it comes to PDFs. The software is a lot more advanced than the software on the Sony DPT-RP1 and Remarkable. Basically everything they lack the N96 has.

There are various zooming options, with settings for PDFs that have multiple columns, there’s auto crop, manual crop, fit to page and fit to width, landscape mode. Screen scrolling is smooth and so is paging forward and back.

Neo Reader 2 supports having multiple documents open, with tabs at the top to switch between them. You can control contrast to darken the text, add notes, highlights, lookup words in the dictionary and use text-to-speech.

There are plenty of navigation options. You can enter page numbers, view multiple pages at once, use hyperlinks and footnotes, search, there’s table of contents support, and it keeps track of previous pages so you can go forward and back.

On the negative side, the user interface is confusing at times and functions aren’t always obvious (it doesn’t help that the user manual is in Chinese). You can add handwritten notes to PDFs but not ePubs. You also have to enter a special notes mode to write on the screen, and you can’t scroll, add highlights, or access the dictionary without manually exiting notes mode.

Overall the Onyx Boox N96 makes for a good PDF reader and an okay ePub reader, but installing apps is too hit or miss so if you can’t live with the built-in apps you should probably consider something else.

Onyx Boox N96ML Carta+ Specs

  • 9.7-inch E Ink Carta display
  • 1200 x 825 resolution (150 ppi)
  • Electromagnetic touchscreen (stylus touch only)
  • Frontlight
  • 1 GHz ARM A9 CPU
  • 16GB internal storage (~12.1GB usable)
  • 1GB RAM
  • MicroSD card slot
  • Wi-Fi
  • Bluetooth
  • Speaker
  • 3.5mm headphone jack
  • Supported files: PDF, TXT, HTML, EPUB, CHM, PDB, MOBIPOCKET(Non-DRM), FB2, DJVU
  • Operating system: Android 4.0.4
  • Battery: 1-2 weeks; 3000 mAh
  • Weight: 16.9 oz. (480 grams)
  • Dimensions: (177 mm x 258 mm x 9.5 mm)
  • Price: $339 USD or less at Amazon and Banggood

Onyx Boox How To Install Dictionary In Ubuntu Download

Posted by9 months ago
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Which of these two is better?

They are pretty much of the same specs. money wise the mars is a bit cheaper.

Dictionary


Onyx boox how to install dictionary in ubuntu download

Likebook Mars

  • 7.8 inch, 1404 x 1872 pixel illuminated display (300 ppi)

  • RK3368 processor

  • 2GB of RAM

  • 16GB of storage + microSD card slot (up to 128GB)

  • 2,800 mAh battery (up to 2 weeks of use)

  • Dual-band WiFi (2.4G/5G)

  • Bluetooth 5.0

  • 7.8″ x 5.7″ x 0.4″

  • 260 fgrams

Boox Nova

  • 7.8″ HD E Ink Carta Screen

  • 1872 x 1404 resolution (300 ppi)

  • Capacitive touch

  • Wacom touch optional

  • Cortex-A17 1.6GHz quad-core processor

  • 2GB LPDDR3 RAM

  • 32GB EMMC storage

  • Frontlight with warm and cold color

  • Wi-Fi

  • Bluetooth 4.1

  • Android 6.0 software

  • Formats supported: PDF, EPUB , TXT, DJVU, HTML, RTF, FB2, DOC, MOBI, CHM, and others.

  • USB-C port

  • Battery 3000mAh Li-Polymer

  • Dimensions:196.3 x 137 x 7.7mm

  • Weight:240 grams

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