Not exact matches
when you think about it,
ereader sales slowing down as people keep them, switch to tablets with
kindle or ecaliber
software on them would likely be the answer, the real baseline is, are they selling just as many ebooks?
Regardless of whether or not you want to call a white paper an eBook, the millions of Amazon
Kindles, B&N Nooks, Sony Readers and Kobo
eReaders — not to mention the literally millions of iPad, iPhone, Android, PC and Mac devices with
eReading software — are a «reading... [Read more...]
That being said, the inkBook still suffers from the same kind of issues that all Android
ereaders suffer from: most 3rd party apps don't work well because they aren't designed for E Ink screens; battery life isn't as good as non-Android
ereaders; the page buttons only work with a few apps; and the Android
software is less - optimized than what you get on
Kindles and Kobos, and it lacks some features that they offer.
Regardless of whether or not you want to call a white paper an eBook, the millions of Amazon
Kindles, B&N Nooks, Sony Readers and Kobo
eReaders — not to mention the literally millions of iPad, iPhone, Android, PC and Mac devices with
eReading software — are a «reading friendly» market for your white paper content.
The best thing about the
software is it offers a lot more layout settings than other
ereaders, including setting custom font weights and sideloading your own fonts — something
Kindles can't do.
which notes that «the iPhone, meanwhile, has quietly become the most widely used e-book reader: more people have downloaded e-book
software (such as Stanza,
eReader and Classics) for iPhones than have bought
Kindles.»