As books go digital, much of  the focus has been on which gadgets offer the best approximation of  old-fashioned paper and ink on a screen. But there's another choice  that's just as important for readers to weigh before they make the leap  to e-books: which e-bookstore to frequent. Reading devices like  the iPad, Kindle and Nook will come and go, but you'll likely want your  e-book collection to stick around. Yet unlike music, commercial e-books  from the leading online stores come with restrictions that complicate  your ability to move your collection from one device to the next. It's  as if old-fashioned books were designed to fit on one particular style  of bookshelves. What happens when you remodel?
Come and go? It is a valid point, at any rate.
The e-bookstores share in  the blame. Amazon.com Inc., Apple Inc., Barnes & Noble Inc. and Sony  Corp. all want you to buy their own gadgets and to continue buying  e-books from their stores. For example, purchases from Apple's new  iBooks store can be read only on Apple's own iPad (and soon the iPhone).  Even though Apple said it would support an industry standard format  called ePub for iBooks, in practice your iBooks purchases remain locked  on Apple's virtual bookshelf.
These vendors are in the business of selling hardware.
For now, the e-bookstore choice comes down to which compromises readers  are willing to accept. Anybody who just wants a simple way to carry  digital books around might be happy with an app-based approach. But  readers intent on building an e-library may want to either invest in an  ePub-based collection, or hold off until the industry figures out a  better solution.
Many of the biggest e-book  providers fall short of putting readers fully in charge of their own  digital-book collections, but they have begun to unveil their own  solutions for moving your e-books around.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
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