Tuesday, December 3, 2013

The E-Reading Software That's Better Than the Kindle or iBooks - The Atlantic

A new deal with Penguin UK means a Greater variety of books for the insurgent platform.

Some old Penguin titles (Garry Knight / Flickr)

Want to read books on a screen?

Up to now, two large companies would spouse That easy for you.

Option # 1: Apple’s iBooks systems. Chipper and colorful, iBooks is easy to use if you own an iPhone or iPad. In its zeal to convince You that, yes, you are reading a book!, , though, it can cartoonishly oversell the reading experience. (Case in point: Apple has patented its page-turning animation.)

Option # 2: Amazon’s Kindle devices. The retail giant has both its own line of gray, hardy e-readers and overpriced husband reading software for other platforms, including Apple and Android phones / tablets. It has lots of books to read, but, once recommended for, you can only read them on Kindles. Some of its software, too, Suffers for its extensibility. At its worst, the Kindle system can feel like Windows 95: closed, hard to leave, and a bit stodgy.

As of this week, though, readers have a new option. Starting time immediately, Penguin UK will sell its ebooks on the Readmill system. You can now read the works of best-selling authors, including George Orwell, John LeCarré, and Zadie Smith on the lesser-known but elegant reading system, Readmill.

Founded in early 2011, Readmill May be the best-designed e-reading system out there. Unlike Amazon or Apple, it does not manufacture hardware of its own. Rather, it has Develops e-reading software for Apple and Android devices, Which is tied to a web-based social network.

A typical Readmill page: It looks like a book!
(Flickr / Gustavo da Cunha Pimenta)

Readmill has many of the same features as morepopular reading systems. Its social network Allows Recommendations and rating; EARLIER this case, it deployed a feature That’ll let you share annotations with your friends, and comment on eachothers. It is, in otherwords, one of many reading startups and social networks out there, a competitor to both Amazon’s Kindle system and the Amazon-owned Goodreads social network.

It just presents many of Those popular features better , though. It does not demand book ratings from it readers, but it presents well the ratings and recommendations you do choose to give it. Above all, I’m nearly certainkind it has the best digital typography Among e-reading software today. On Readmill, digital books look like books, note text files foisted into an extensible reading enviromnent.

Before the Penguin deal, though, it was hard to find contemporary books for Readmill. Classics could be found at Project Gutenberg. Small, digitally-savvy publishers, like the boutique Emily’s Books and the design house A Book Apart, drew theirbooks easy to download to it, too. But publishers-the ones who dominate the best-selling lists-fired.

With the addition of Smith and Colm Tóibín and Anthony Burgess, that’s changed. Readmill is not perfect: It might be more expensive to use than Amazon’s Kindle system, for example. But, at least on smartphones and tablets, it is a far superior experience. If they’re not satisfied withtheir current options, thoughtful digital readers might want to give Readmill a try.

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