The Modos Flow is a 13.3-inch color E Ink monitor designed to make e-paper usable for everyday computing. The display reaches a 60Hz refresh rate, a major jump from typical E Ink screens, allowing smoother scrolling, typing, and interface interaction. Modos Flow uses a 3200 × 2400 resolution panel in black-and-white mode, with color support at lower resolution, while maintaining a paper-like surface that reduces glare and eye strain.
The monitor connects via USB-C and supports touch and stylus input, with multiple display modes tuned for browsing, typing, and reading. It runs on open-source firmware, allowing users to modify performance and behavior. The system balances speed with typical E Ink trade-offs such as muted color and occasional ghosting, positioning it as a secondary display for text-heavy workflows rather than high-motion tasks.
Sleek Color E-Ink Monitors
The Modos Flow Brings 60hz Refresh to Paper-Like Display
Trend Themes
1. High-refresh Color E-ink Displays - By combining 60Hz refresh rates with paper-like ergonomics, these displays enable low-fatigue secondary computing experiences that challenge the dominance of LCD and OLED in productivity setups.
2. Open-source Display Firmware - Community-driven firmware customization is enabling modular performance and feature tailoring that can disrupt proprietary display ecosystems.
3. Touch and Stylus E-paper Interaction - Stylus and touch support on e-paper surfaces creates pen-first workflows that merge note-taking tablets with desktop monitor capabilities.
Industry Implications
1. Remote Work Tools - Secondary E Ink monitors optimized for long-form reading and typing present ergonomic alternatives for distributed workers seeking reduced eye strain.
2. Healthcare and Telemedicine - Low-glare, high-contrast screens with extended comfort profiles are well-suited for clinicians conducting prolonged chart reviews and virtual consultations.
3. Education and E-learning - Paper-like displays with stylus annotation support offer digital textbook and exam experiences that could transform study and assessment environments.