So someone wrote a short blog post about how the Kindle has changed the way
they read:
http://dbasch.posterous.com/amazon-has-drastically-changed-the-way-i-read

Kindle advantages (according to the post):

   - pipeline of unread books to read through
   - multiple Kindle apps, can continue reading on any device
   - buying books based on Kindle store availability
   - so cheap it's treated as an appliance

The only app so far that can act as a replacement is Cool Reader 3:
http://coolreader.org/e-index.htm

All ebook apps have a pipeline of unread books.

It is is available on Android, Windows and GNU/Linux (Ubuntu package but
the source is licensed under the GNU GPL, so not a problem to create new
packages). That covers the second point only partially. Of course it keeps
track of the last page you read, but it doesn't do this for multiple
devices. For example, I'm using Dropbox (yes it's evil and yes I'm looking
to switch away from it!) and it would be nice if the metadata used by Cool
Reader were stored in the same directory as my ebooks. Then I could truly
continue reading on any device. As it is, I have to remember the last page
I was on.

I think the third point is helped by when authors and publishers make it
clear on their websites that an epub version can be bought. O'Reilly does
this I think and so do a few other publishers. It would be nice if we
started a letter writing campaign or something to promote that. While some
book publishers are still wary of selling ebooks, the ones that already
sell ebooks could make it more clear that they're selling DRM-free ebooks.

The appliance argument can be fought against in two ways; recommend devices
that are super cheap but are as free/open as possible (the
cheapest/libre-est Android phone or tablet could work, even an HP Touchpad
would work since WebOS is now free), and put out more "propaganda" that
promotes the perspective of any computing device as a general computing
device rather than an appliance.

Thoughts?
Rudolf O.

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