Not exact matches
I haven't used this service yet, but I received this
offer of listing my
kindle eBook with the
Kindle Book Blast folks in my inbox today.
We all know it's a brave new world out there when it comes to publishing — paper books,
ebooks, pdfs;
Kindles and iPads and Sony Readers... and dozens of new startups too,
offering even newer and more exciting options for authors and readers alike.
«I will post awesome review on your amazon product,
kindle book,
ebook etc,» read one
offer cited in the suit.
It would allow
Kindles to read non-DRM'd epubs from the growing number of indie
ebook stores that
offer them, without losing their lock on existing customers.
Imagine being able to
offer your customers the ability to go to this wiki and spend a few moments clicking around on product user manuals and how - to information they would like to compile for a project they're working on — and then simply clicking a button and having all of that material magically appear as an
eBook document formatted for their iPads and
Kindles.
That's a sore subject for some because Kobo specifically states on the descriptions for their ereaders that there is «no advertising», subtly taking a shot at Amazon's
Kindles with special
offers that have ads on the lockscreen and homescreen, but when Kobo is adverting recommended
ebooks on the homescreen there's not much of a difference.
Meanwhile, for those who love to watch the
ebook reader market and compare the popularity of various devices, it will be fascinating to watch the rising and falling
offer prices for over 140 devices (including dedicated
ebook readers, tablets, and smart phones) that Amazon has tagged with a «
kindle» keyword in its trade - in department.
As more and more tablets and smart phones and comparable devices are adopted by the entire range of users, from high - end goodies to very affordable low - end devices, and now that
Kindles and Nooks are routinely being
offered below $ 50 — and I suspect within 2 - 3 years, there will be sub - $ 35 Eink readers —
ebooks are soon going to be the only market that really matters.
I totally agree with Cassi's comment that it would be great if all publishers
offered a
kindle version
ebook (and at an economic price).
This site
offers almost 60,000 free
eBooks that they have available in both epub and
kindle formats.
Only a handful of
ebook readers
offer a TTS feature: the
Kindles, BeBook Mini, EZ Reader Pocket PRO, and Hanvons.
If CMSs would begin
offering automatic conversion to ePub files, and if (unlikely as it is) iPads,
Kindles and Nooks would all support ePub and allow you to subscribe to publications using the epubcast format, we would see a boom of new content for tablets and
ebook readers, and it would be vastly simpler to get that content on our devices.
Worth the writer's while to check the
kindle discussion groups, where disgruntled Canadian
Kindle users are kicking back about the new higher pricing for
ebooks, disqualification from daily deal
offers, and other inconveniences associated with whatever it is Amazon is doing with its Canadian operations.