Yanko Design

DuRoBo Krono Brings an AI-Powered Pocket ePaper Focus Hub to the US

Trying to read or think on a phone never quite works. Notifications interrupt articles halfway through, feeds wait one swipe away from whatever you were concentrating on, and even long reads become just another tab competing for attention. E‑readers tried to solve this, but most stopped at books and stayed locked into one ecosystem. DuRoBo, a Dutch e‑paper specialist, is bringing Krono to CES 2026 in Las Vegas with a different ambition, treating focus, reflection, and idea capture as equally important.

Krono is a pocket‑sized smart ePaper focus hub that has made waves in Europe and is now entering the US market. It wraps a 6.13‑inch E Ink Carta 1200 display with 300 PPI clarity into a minimalist, mechanical‑inspired body that measures 154 × 80 × 9 mm and weighs about 173 g. It is for capturing and shaping thoughts with on‑device AI, ambient audio, and a Smart Dial that feels more tactile than tapping glass.

Designer: DuRoBo

The paper‑like screen, anti‑glare etching, and dual‑tone frontlight make it comfortable for long reads, whether books, saved articles, or PDFs. The compact body feels closer to a large phone than a tablet, which encourages carrying it everywhere as a dedicated space for slower content. The display mimics paper well enough that you can read for hours without the eye strain from backlit screens.

The Smart Dial and Axis bar are the main interaction story. The dial lets you flip pages, adjust brightness or volume, and, with a long‑press, open Spark, Krono’s idea vault. The Axis along the top rear houses eight breathing lights that glow subtly while you read or work, reinforcing the sense of a calm, separate device. The dial and lights give Krono a more analog feel, turning navigation and focus into something you do with your hand.

Spark is where AI enters. Press and hold the dial to dictate a thought, meeting note, or passing idea, and Krono records it, transcribes it with speech‑to‑text, and runs an AI summary that turns it into a structured note. Text Mode lets you refine that note on the e‑paper screen. The whole process happens on‑device, keeping ideas private and the interface calm.

Libby AI is the on‑device assistant that answers prompts and helps with outlines or clarifications without dragging you into a browser. Krono runs Android 15 with full Google Play Store access, powered by an octa‑core processor, 6 GB of RAM, and 128 GB of storage, so it can run Kindle, Notion, or other tools. DuRoBo’s own interface keeps the experience geometric and minimal.

The built‑in speaker and Bluetooth audio are part of the focus story. You can listen to music, podcasts, or audiobooks while reading or writing, turning Krono into a self‑contained environment for commutes or late‑night sessions. The 3,950 mAh battery and tuned refresh algorithms support long stretches of use, not constant app‑hopping, which is what you want from a device that is supposed to be a reprieve from the usual screen.

Krono’s CES 2026 appearance is more than just another e‑reader launch. It is DuRoBo’s attempt to give US readers and thinkers a pocketable device that treats focus, reflection, and idea capture as first‑class design problems. The specs matter, but the real promise is a small, quiet object that can sit between a book and a phone, borrowing the best of both without inheriting their worst habits.

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