If you follow the ebook market you were likely stunned this June when Steve Jobs claimed to have captured 22% of the electronic book market overnight with the release of iBooks and iPad. Many of us ...
Remember back in June when Apple told developers the iBookstore had 22 percent of the eBook market? An author who uses both platforms to market his writing is now telling a vastly-different story. He ...
So the Kindle app for iPad is out on the store, which lets you view all your existing Kindle books or buy new ones. I suppose I'll have a better sense of it tomorrow. The Kindle app for the iPad went ...
If you haven’t got an iPad, you’ve probably been depressed that iBooks isn’t available on your iPhone. As if that was going to last for long. Steve Jobs just announced iBooks support in iPhone OS 4.0.
Tele-Read reports that iBooks has taken a tumble; it’s no longer the most-downloaded app for the iPad. Apple’s iBooks Store has just fallen from the top rung among free iPad Apps in Apple’s Top Charts ...
The iPad may be a game changer for books on the Internet. Author and intellectual property rights attorney Jonathan Kirsch talks Kindle, eBooks and iBooks with New York Times media columnist Motoko ...
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. Apple debuted its long-rumored tablet device in San Francisco today.
Enough time has gone by now to get a sense for what the iPad can handle. I’ve had time to digest its offerings from the higher-resolution screen to the nuances of having a full-screen map to ...
One of the iPad's marquee features is iBooks, Apple's book reading application and bookstore. It's a good app, attractive and capable. The bookstore itself isn't bad either, with a healthy selection ...