Saturday, October 9, 2010

iPad App Reviews - iBook for the iPad


Image : http://www.flickr.com


Steve Jobs yesterday during his keynote presentation at WWDC 2010 that the new iPhone 4 iBook can run the application is currently available for use only on the iPad. Synchronize place and highlights in your books will be activated between Apple devices, so that the iBook use more like the Amazon Kindle.

When I bought the iBook iPad was one of the first applications that I have chosen to download. This is significant because I had at that time wascompletely opposite to the motion-reader. I consider myself a traditionalist when it comes to my reading, I prefer the texture of the pages, the ability to dog-ear my place in a book, has no self-feeling happy when a very large Volume, after having finished reading it. Each of them were aspects of the reading I was reluctant to give up.

But times are changing. I bought and listened to my first audiobook - again - on iTunes for myiPod touch last fall and fell in intonations funny David Sedaris reading his book Me Talk Pretty One Day when I was running my daily life. Audio books are a sort of staple for me now. He seemed to try to equal importance, my first experience with e-book on another device Apple. I was not disappointed, and now wonder about the life in front of my iBook App

In an effort to be honest, I decided to download and test the Amazon Kindle on my iPad also AppEven my devotion evident in all Apple products aside, I must say that I iBooks are a better e-reading experience. Apple is trying everything possible, the e-book experience closer to reality as to make possible. His books are to be saved from the iBook, the iBook to download your library. When you open and read a book that investigates the structure of the page e-book as a page in an actual book.

The Amazon Kindle e-reader is certainly less flashy looking and smooth. You must log in to yourAmazon.com to buy account and download your books to store not only seems seamless as the iBook. If you choose a book, you load the homepage of the Kindle. The appearance of the book after opening a single frame of the text appear, similar to how it would be a PDF.

Although I came to really have fun with my readers iBook, I can say that neither the reader Kindle iBook never rival the experience of reading a real paper book, but I like the possibility ofDownload new books, when I want without going to the library or in bookstores. There is a convenience factor for the final e-book. The books are not cheap, but I'm mainly reading the classics, which are freely available on the iBook stick (there are Classic free on the Kindle). There are frustrations, such as the inability to be easily at every launch, but these are the differences that continue to keep proper books to read my first choice.