The iPad is an excellent digital comic book device. It's thin, lightweight, and has enough storage to house Kirby and Lee's groundbreaking Fantastic Four run. But in order to read comic books on Apple ...
One of the iPad's marquee features is iBooks, Apple's book reading application and bookstore. It's a good app, attractive and capable. The bookstore itself isn't bad either, with a healthy selection ...
The Amazon Kindle is an excellent e-reader, and the latest version is a good value at $150. Yet Apple’s iPad is leading demand for e-book readers in the US, and slowly impacting the Kindle’s market ...
Barnes & Noble says it will launch an iPad version of its eReader app, in anticipation of the release of Apple’s device on April 3. The app will compete with Apple’s own iBook store for e-books, and ...
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. Apple made its iPad 2 announcement at a packed press event in San ...
Normally we'd rather choke on a well-buttered crumpet than become more American, but now we've got our hands on an iPad, our craving for apps and other goodies means we're suddenly more than happy to ...
Apple has updated iTunes to version 9.1 to offer support for the iPad release on Saturday. The headline features are iPad syncing and support for books, and there is also some tweaking to the Genius ...
We said it long ago: The Apple iPad will redefine newspapers, textbooks, magazines. Were we right? Is Apple bringing a media revolution? Oh, it’ll get there. https ...
The iPad is just for content consumption, right? It looks like somebody forgot to send that memo to the folks at Red Jumper. Their app – Book Creator – lets you quickly and easily make e-books on your ...
The Surface Book is a laptop with a slide-off screen that you can use in short bursts as a huge tablet (or "Clipboard"). The iPad Pro is a huge tablet that you can attach a keyboard accessory (sold ...
For generations, reading a picture book worked one way: Place a child on your lap, crack the book’s spine, turn the pages and begin narrating the story of Curious George, Max and the wild things or ...