Big deal brings millions of eBooks to many platforms
www.9to5mac.com | discovered: | published:

There’s been some interest in eBooks of late , as devices such as Kindle, iPhone, iPod touch and others make electronic book-reading a little more comfortable. Whether you’re an eBook afficionado, or a book as an item purist, you’ll have read about ...

Eying Amazon and its Kindle, Google teams up with Interead
www.techcrunch.com | discovered: | published:

Google is clearly moving fast in setting up partnerships with ebook reader manufacturers and store operators to give some weight to its threat to Amazon and the latter's Kindle product line. First, the company teamed up with Sony , adding about 1 mi ...

British e-reader company in partnership with Google Books (AFP)
tech.yahoo.com | discovered: | published:

AFP - Interead, the British company behind the COOL-ER electronic reader, announced a partnership with Google on Wednesday to add more than one million public domain books to its online bookstore. ...

World’s thinnest ebook unveiled at IFA
www.gadgetell.com | discovered: | published:

Section: Audio , Portable Audio , Gadgets / Other , Lifestyle , Imaging , Accessories At just 0.4” or 9.2mm, the Lubix L’Book is currently the thinnest ebook reader on the market today.  The L’Book was announced today at the IFA fair in Germany.  Un ...

Coole-er eBook reader gets Google books boost
stuff.tv | discovered: | published:

Coolerbooks.com bumps up its catalogue with a massive Google Books tie-in ...

Google deal turns Coolerbooks into World's largest ebookstore
www.techdigest.tv | discovered: | published:

Its sudden massive growth has been sparked by a deal with Google that allows COOLERBOOKS.com is to include over 1 million public domain books (close to half a million outside the US) from Google Books in its online library. All the books are of cours ...

iRiver Story ebook spotted online
www.ubergizmo.com | discovered: | published:

The word on the street is that iRiver has an eBook called Story that is practically ready to be unleashed. It supports popular formats like ePub, pdf or xls. Physically, it should be (very) close to the Kindle 2, as it has a 6" display and a keyboar ...

Sighted: iriver Story e-reader, latest Kindle killer
dvice.com | discovered: | published:

These are supposedly pictures of the iriver Story, a new e-reader that looks suspiciously similar to the Amazon Kindle . iriver has been rumored to be working on such a device, though the news comes from a online e-reader forum, so take from that wh ...

Switched On: Sony plays both ends against the Kindle
www.engadget.com | discovered: | published:

Ross Rubin ( @rossrubin ) contributes Switched On , a column about consumer technology. Last week, Sony introduced Reader Daily Edition, the latest and most advanced Reader in its 2009 lineup, and attempted to recapture the excitement around the cat ...

iRiver Story ebook spotted online
www.ubergizmo.com | discovered: | published:

The word on the street is that iRiver has an eBook called Story that is practically ready to be unleashed. It supports popular formats like ePub, pdf or xls. Physically, it should be (very) close to the Kindle 2, as it has a 6" display and a keyboar ...

It's Not a New Kindle, It's the iRiver Story [E-Readers]
gizmodo.com | discovered: | published:

iRiver's been working on an e-reader, and until now, we had no idea what it looked like, let alone what was waiting under the hood. It's called the iRiver Story , and obviously the design is quite a bit similar to the Kindle—t's not only white, but ...

iriver Story ebook reader revealed
www.slashgear.com | discovered: | published:

Images of iriver’s new ebook reader, the Story, have emerged , together with partial specifications for the 6-inch E Ink device.  As well as having a full QWERTY keyboard and a memory card slot content with up to 32GBs, the Story is compatible with ...

Byte Rights: Kindling Our Desires
www.maximumpc.com | discovered: | published:

The Kindle is pretty, and sleek, and invitingly Linux-based. But underneath that alluring exterior, right alongside that hackable code, is a body of laws: terms of service, DMCA, and DRM, saying “Oh no, don’t touch me!” To keep providers like the Au ...


Share