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Nov 16

Download Ipad Books – Download Magazines on Your iPad

Posted on Tuesday, November 16, 2010 in Download Ipad Books


  

iPad magazine sales have started off slow, but this does not deter the Media Industry as they are optimistic that the situation will improve as Apple’s iPad becomes more popular. Once the popularity of e magazines takes off it will be as natural as breathing to download magazines instead of picking them up at the local newsstand.

Paper magazines will probably never become redundant, but Publishers (more…)

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Oct 16

Download Ipad – Streaming video company looks to bridge the iPad’s Flash gap – Yahoo! News

Posted on Saturday, October 16, 2010 in Download Ipad


  

Streaming video company looks to bridge the iPad’s Flash gap – Yahoo! News

Remember the big iPad unveiling in January, when Steve Jobs was showing off the tablet’s Safari browser and stumbled on a telltale blue “there-should-be-Flash-here” icon smack-dab in the middle of the New York Times’ home page? Well, iPad users visiting the Gray Lady this Saturday might (more…)

Oct 8

Download Ipad – How To Transfer Pdf Document To The Ipad?

Posted on Friday, October 8, 2010 in Download Ipad


  

How To Transfer Pdf Document To The Ipad?

A Portable Document Format is a universal computer application which can be used to create files for a variety of purposes. There are a number of business files such as reports, manuals, contracts, agreements, newsletters and much more. You can even present your resumes and other such documents to keep the information intact and secure as well as professional (more…)

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Oct 1

Download Ipad – YouTube – Apple – iPad – App – iTunes Store

Posted on Friday, October 1, 2010 in Download Ipad


  



Kindle for iPhone, iPad now has video, audio – Yahoo! News

With its just-added support for video and audio clips, Amazon’s Kindle app for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch just leapfrogged the actual Kindle — and Apple’s iBooks app, for that matter — in terms of multimedia features.

Amazon announced the free upgrade late Sunday, along with 13 volumes in the Kindle store that take advantage of the new feature. Among them: a series of Rick Steves travel guide books, “Knitting for Dummies,” a book of 250 North American bird songs, a songbook for “Les Miserables,” and a biography of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt featuring audio clips of 30 of the president’s most famous speeches and Fireside Chats.

I tested out the new Kindle app on both the iPhone 4 and the iPad, and both worked smoothly enough, although there’s nothing particularly eye-catching about their functionality.

Swiping through Rick Steves’ Florence travel guide, I came across a little blue speaker icon above a section describing Michelangelo’s David at the Accademia. I tapped the icon, and a basic audio player slid up from the bottom of the iPhone screen. (On the iPad, the audio player appears in a small pop-up window.) There’s a pause and a back button that takes you to the very beginning of the audio clip, but that’s about it. And no — there’s no audio multitasking for the Kindle app as there is for streaming music apps like Pandora or Slacker.

Embedded videos in Kindle books are equally basic. I watched tips on working with flour in a book called “Rose’s Heavenly Cakes” (yum) by tapping a blue “play” button in a color slide. On the iPhone, the ensuing five-minute clip zoomed to fill the screen, while the iPad version put the video in a zoomable pop-up window. A progress slider lets you “scrub” from one part of the video to another (unlike the Kindle audio clips, which you can play only from the beginning).

We’re not talking a lot of razzmatazz here. But the utilitarian video and audio clips do the job, and hopefully upcoming Kindle volumes will up the ante in terms of presentation.

Of course, audio and video content takes up a lot more space than mere text, which means that audio- and video-enabled Kindle volumes take a lot longer to download — up to five minutes on my home cable modem, compared to just seconds for standard Kindle books. Speaking of which: Because multimedia Kindle titles are so large, Amazon will let you download them only over Wi-Fi — not 3G.

Where does the new audio- and video-enabled Kindle iPhone app leave Apple’s iBooks app — or the Kindle itself? For the time being, iBooks — as well as the Barnes & Noble iPhone/iPad app, come to think of it — is still stuck in a read-only world. And though the current Kindle supports text-to-speech and audiobooks (which means audio clips shouldn’t be much of a stretch), full-motion video is still a no-can-do feature on the Kindle’s low-power but slow-as-molasses e-paper display. (Amazon chief exec Jeff Bezos recently admitted that a color Kindle is “still a long way out.”)

Question for you book lovers out there: How important would embedded audio and video clips be for your Kindle-reading pleasure? Would multimedia be a killer feature, or a dispensable bell and/or whistle?

• Amazon: Press release

— Ben Patterson is a technology writer for Yahoo! News.

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