The battery for SONY PRS-300
In order to be sure that exactly this battery is installed in your e-book it is necessary to disassemble your device before ordering something. Some manufacturers of e-books install different batteries into different batches of the same model!
Attention: the authors are not responsible for disruptions of work of e-books got after using this information. Everything you do is on your risk! Using this method removes your e-book from the warranty!
In e-books SONY PRS-300 is installed the battery CS-PRD300SL.
Parameters of the battery:
- model: CS-PRD300SL
- capacity: 750 mAh
- length: 52 mm
- width: 32 mm
- thickness: 4.0 mm
You have to perform the following sequence to replace the battery of SONY PRS-300.
- You should take off the back cover of the e-reader (the materials which are lower can help you). Try not to use metal things for detaching the latches of the case for preserving the appearance of your e-book;
- Then carefully detach the socket of the battery from the board of the device;
- After that take off the old battery;
- Then install the new battery into its place;
- After that connect the power socket to the board;
- Then assemble the e-reader and check its operability in the reading mode and charging mode.
You can order a new battery in the internet-shop using this link:
You can see the step by step instruction for disassembling of the e-book on the site youtube.com using this link:
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Robert J. Sawyer "Wake". Caitlin Decter is young, pretty, feisty, a mathematics genius - and blind. Still, she can surf the net with the best of them, following its complex paths clearly in her mind. But Caitlin's brain long ago co-opted her primary visual cortex to help her navigate online. So when she receives an implant to restore her sight, instead of seeing reality, the landscape of the World Wide Web explodes into her consciousness, spreading out all around her in a riot of colors and shapes. While exploring this amazing realm, she discovers something - some other - lurking in the background. And it's getting more and more intelligent with each passing day. The first of a spellbinding future history trilogy that charts what will happen when the world's first first, and superior, artificial-intelligence is born in the web.
What to read?
Jean Kwok "Girl in Translation". When Kimberly Chang and her mother emigrate from Hong Kong to Brooklyn squalor, she quickly begins a secret double life: exceptional schoolgirl during the day, Chinatown sweatshop worker in the evenings. Disguising the more difficult truths of her life-like the staggering degree of her poverty, the weight of her family's future resting on her shoulders, or her secret love for a factory boy who shares none of her talent or ambition-Kimberly learns to constantly translate not just her language but herself back and forth between the worlds she straddles....
Neil Gaiman "Trigger Warning". From one of the most critically acclaimed and beloved storytellers of our time comes a major new collection of stories and verse
"We each have our little triggers ... things that wait for us in the dark corridors of our lives." So says Neil Gaiman in his introduction to Trigger Warning, a remarkable compendium of twenty-five stories and poems that explore the transformative power of imagination.
To find these books, check out the "e-library".