The Onyx Boox Palma looks like a cell phone but lacks essential functions such as mobile communications. So it's more of a very handy e-book reader with Android app support and even a small camera. Find out what you can do with the Palma in our test.https://www.notebookcheck.net/Onyx-Boox-Palma-review-Palm-tablet-with-e-ink-display-and-camera.797527.0.html
A test to check how long it lasts while reading books might have been nice. My 4+ years old Kindle Paperwhite 3 which is significantly less power efficient than the PW4/5 regularly lasts 60-70 hours with the backlight and Wifi disabled. With a - 3x capacity battery if the Onyx lasts as much it would be really good as Android and the much more demanding SoC exact a toll on battery life.
Dear Notebookcheck,
Your test report shows that the minimum brightness is 0.2 cd/m².
Does it mean it's impossible to disable the frontlight COMPLETELY on Onyx Boox Palma (i.e. to set the brightness to 0 cd/m²)??
Thank you.
Michael Bradley
Thank you for all the amazing work that you're doing.
The article says that no PWM has been detected in the device. I wonder whether you actually measured the led backlight for flicker? I've got the Palma and its yellow light tiggers a strong reaction (eye strain) as if it uses PWM for dimming. I saw other posts of users with a similar problem caused by the Palma's backlight (!).
I suspect Palma is using PWM to optimise battery usage for its backlight and it may be quite harsh. It's not something I noticed on Onyx Boox Note Air (I) which I also have.
Can you pls confirm you've actually measured the blue and yellow ranges of the device's backlight for PWM flicker? Thank you in advance.