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One book, nine e-reader apps – Part 4

July 24th, 2011 Comments off

Kindle App

It’s worth saying right from the start that I think it admirable that Amazon have made it possible to read books from their Kindle Store on so many different platforms, ranging from desktop PCs through to a wide range of mobile devices, including, of course, the iPad, which could be said to directly compete with their own Kindle device. I imagine that the reason is that Amazon make far more money from selling Kindle books than they do selling Kindle devices, so this just makes good business sense. Whatever the thinking, they have done a really good job with the Kindle iPad app. Read more…

Categories: Digital Life, Reading Tags: , ,

One book, nine e-reader apps – Part 3

July 22nd, 2011 Comments off

iBooks – PDF Mode

It may seem like cheating to discuss iBooks’ PDF reader mode as a separate e-reader app. But it behaves and looks in many ways so different from the ePub reader mode that I think I can justify it. This will, however, be a rather shorter review than the previous one.

So how does iBooks in PDF mode differ from its ‘normal’ ePub reader mode?

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Categories: Digital Life, Reading Tags: , , ,

One book, nine e-reader apps – Part 2

July 20th, 2011 Comments off

iBooks

Apple’s iBooks app is, of course, the definitive e-reader app for the iPad which all others must be compared against. While it has many great features, there is still a lot wrong with it, and areas in which other e-reader apps improve upon it.

In this series, I’m using my own collection of science fiction stories, Islands as a sample. As well as a little self-promotion, this way I can be sure of being able to compare the exact same book in the various different apps, so that there are no differences in format attributable to the book itself.

Let’s look at various areas for comparison between the various readers, to see how iBooks does:
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Categories: Digital Life, Reading Tags: , ,

One book, nine e-reader apps – Part 1

July 17th, 2011 Comments off

   
    

Introduction

Though I usually read books on my iPad through Apple’s iBooks app, I have been using several different e-reader apps recently, and I thought it would be instructive to compare them. Each of them have their own strengths and weaknesses. Some of them are good, some of them so bad as to be useless.

The main reason that I have been trying different e-reader apps is that all of the apps seem to share a common weakness – if you adjust the settings for font, font-size, background and foreground colors, and so on, those settings apply to every book in your library. Yet different books often demand individual settings. For example, I was trying to use iBooks to both read a mystery novel as well as to read a textbook on iOS programming. The novel required a nice, readable, serif font, at a comfortable size. The textbook needed a larger font applied, and looked best in a sans-serif font. But iBooks doesn’t let me store these settings on a per-book basis, so each time I switched books I had to go through the process of changing the settings. Read more…

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