elf: Computer chip with location dot (You Are Here)

[personal profile] elf 2011-03-07 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Yep. Using the 3G browser to read fic directly. Doesn't bother loading it onto the device itself as an ebook. If the Kindle let her download ebooks from AO3 & read them, she'd do so, but that's extra steps she generally doesn't care to bother with.

It's something the next generation of ebook readers is going to want--not just a web browser, but a download-and-read option, a way to get stable content onto the device without plugging into a computer, and without being limited to buying it from a single store.
elf: Computer chip with location dot (You Are Here)

[personal profile] elf 2011-03-07 08:21 pm (UTC)(link)
I meant "the next generation of ebook devices," not the people reading them. The first device that offers that is going to be able to make serious inroads on the Kindle, if they don't absolutely botch the rest of it. I don't think *anything* lets people download-and-read-ebooks other than those through the official branded store portal.

I can see problems with it--once you allow download-and-open ability, you're facing virus issues--but a device that could only run a limited set of filetypes should be able to get around that. If MegaKillerWorm.exe has been disguised as GreatEbook.epub, the epub reader just won't deal with; it shows a blank page or error message.
trialia: Ziva David (Cote de Pablo), head down, hair wind-streamed, eyes almost closed. (Default)

[personal profile] trialia 2011-03-07 11:19 pm (UTC)(link)
FWIW, I use Aldiko for Android for my ebook reading, and I use their collections and tag functions to distinguish read and unread books. I find it works quite well. I can also read the meta-data and tag as I wish. :)

[personal profile] cathepsut 2011-03-07 09:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Me, too! Great idea...