The library ebook landscape has changed significantly since the project was first announced in March 2012.
Not exact matches
If a school
library tries to commit to one device, say Kindle or Nook, the rapidly changing
landscape means their
ebook collection could rapidly become out - dated and unusable.
This is sort of a big deal because KoReader brings a whole lot to the party... like 2 column
landscape, night mode, Kobo's * complete * control over the
ebook experience (as you say in the video) within KoReader, * very * easy
ebook organization (KoReader understands folders so organizing a
library is trivial) AND a * much * better PDF reader with text reflow.
Features include the ability to lend certain
ebooks for 14 days, there are eight font types and five font sizes, read in
landscape or portrait modes with a lock for the screen orientation, choose what page to got to or use the scroll bar, and sync your
library of
ebooks and last page read across devices.
It's a complicated
landscape out there in terms of
libraries providing popular e-books — a lot of infrastructure costs with OverDrive, copyright issues over multiple downloads for Amazon Kindle and the like, and oldish materials on our TexShare NetLibrary accounts that you can't download anyway (I am only referring to the
ebook subscription here, not the e-Audiobook subscription).
Ebooks are definitely a permanent part of the
library landscape.
The Archos 70c is more than just an
eBook reader, this is multimedia device with features Adobe DRM support for download and read all compatible formats
eBooks, integrated with video, music and photo player functions, you can also browse the web, download apps and Bookmarks Manager for manage your
library, set bookmarks, and rotate the screen in portrait or
landscape mode.