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Kindle Everywhere: Amazon Launches Windows Application

Written by Frederic Lardinois / November 10, 2009 9:53 AM / 5 Comments

kindle_for_pc_logo_nov09.pngAmazon just released a free e-book reader application for Windows PCs. The Kindle for PC application allows Amazon customers to read Kindle books on their Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7 machines. A Mac version will follow soon. The application was clearly designed to work on a wide variety of computers and works especially well on netbooks and touchscreen devices. Besides being capable of working with Amazon's proprietary e-book format, the app can also display e-books in the .mobi file format.

Features

The application itself is pretty sparse, with just a few buttons for sorting books and switching between downloaded and archived books. Amazon did not integrate the Kindle store into the application, though a prominent link in the app opens up the Kindle store in the browser. This comes as a surprise, given how easy it would be to integrate the store. While reading books, users can adjust the size of the font and bookmark a page. The app can display notes and highlights that were created on a Kindle or in the Kindle for iPhone app.

kindle_pc_library.jpg

In designing the app, Amazon clearly had touchscreen and netbook users in mind. All the buttons in the app are large and the left and right edges of the application can be clicked - or tapped - to move between pages. To advance a page, users can also use their cursor keys or mouse wheel.

Users of the Windows application can not add notes or highlights to a book right now, though the company plans to add the ability to create notes and highlights in the application in the future. Amazon is also considering to add a search feature, as well as the ability zoom and rotate images. Another feature that is currently missing but that netbook users would likely appreciate is a full-screen mode.

Kindle Everywhere

kindle_for_pc_book.pngOverall, the app is easy to use and works as advertised. The lack of a built-in store and the ability to add notes and highlights is a slight disappointment, though. Sony, Barnes & Noble and others offer desktop e-readers for OSX and Windows with more features. Amazon decided to keep the application as simple as possible.

For Amazon, this is an important move, as it gives the company access to a wider market. While Amazon has sold millions of Kindles, the PC market is still far bigger and the popularity of netbooks could also give the app a boost. Reading a book on a PC or laptop is not as comfortable as on a hardware e-reader with an e-ink display, but the free desktop application will allow users to sample e-books and get accustomed to the process before buying an e-reader.

The desktop application will also give Amazon a presence on all the big platforms - so while other devices may be more open than the Kindle, this argument against the Kindle becomes less potent as Kindle users can now read their books virtually everywhere anyway.


Comments

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  1. im still waiting for a real 3d/virtual-digital book, not this paper-like format,,,

     Posted by: frvf Author Profile Page | November 10, 2009 3:48 PM



  2. Kindle would succeed in making a huge market as it digs into the PC market place especially with such a FREE app http://thetechnologycafe.com/kindle-for-pc-now-available-for-download/

    Posted by: Samir | November 10, 2009 8:39 PM



  3. Maybe I'm missing something, but my Media Center that came with the Windows 7 Ultimate has less features than my former Vista Home Premium version. All I see now are options for local Music, Pics, and Video, and no more online streaming feeds such as News, Sports, Online Radio, Movie Trailers, and such...is there an update coming up or what is the deal?

    Posted by: jeu | November 10, 2009 11:03 PM



  4. Currently, 72 of the top 100 most popular Kindle books listed on Amazon are FREE!

    Posted by: Melissa C | November 13, 2009 5:56 AM



  5. Amid rumors and artifacts of Twitter's testing accounts managed by multiple users, we've found a startup focusing on precisely that problem

    Posted by: mantolama | January 20, 2010 7:01 AM



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