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Kindle for mac 10.8
Kindle for mac 10.8







  1. #Kindle for mac 10.8 mac os x#
  2. #Kindle for mac 10.8 pdf#
  3. #Kindle for mac 10.8 trial#
  4. #Kindle for mac 10.8 download#
  5. #Kindle for mac 10.8 free#

#Kindle for mac 10.8 pdf#

Viticci is selling a PDF version of his Mountain Lion review (apparently eschewing the iBooks and Kindle stores) and bundling other feature stories from the website. The success of Siracusa’s last ebook might have inspired another well-known Mac blogger, Federico Viticci of MacStories, to release a similar ebook for Mountain Lion.

#Kindle for mac 10.8 free#

(We’ve even tried it ourselves with a free ebook featuring past work more to come there.) Consumers are willing to pay for the convenience, simplicity, and uncluttered design of a single file. We’ve written before about the value in repurposing otherwise free content into paid ebooks. It seems like a hell of a lot of work for a lousy ebook, but there is money in that banana stand.

#Kindle for mac 10.8 trial#

You could read Siracusa’s Twitter feed on any given day in the last few weeks to see what a trial it has been. Open the same ebook file in both the Mac and iOS Kindle reader applications and you’ll see two very different appearances. The Kindle ebook is a single file that contains two versions of the content: one in Kindle Format 8 and one in the older Kindle format. The Mac version does support KF8, however, as does the Kindle Fire. Unfortunately, many Kindle reading devices and application don’t support Kindle Format 8 - most notably, the iOS Kindle app. KF8-capable readers support amazing new technologies like text that flows around images and the ability to tie a caption to an image.

kindle for mac 10.8

From Siracusa’s blog today:įor the best ebook reading experience, use a device or application that supports Kindle Format 8. Unfortunately for Siracusa’s sanity, there are still severe limitations on both the creation and reading sides of ebooks. And Siracusa takes an undisclosed percentage of that. By my math, according to this complicated pricing page, Ars will take in somewhere around $2.70 for every ebook sold in the U.S. Ars Technica had considered selling the ebook at a lower price, but Amazon’s tiered pricing incentivizes slightly higher prices. Of course, being on the major ebook sales platforms also means giving them a piece of the pie. (Premier membership is $5 per month, which just happens to be the same price as the ebook itself.)

#Kindle for mac 10.8 download#

(That’s what happens when the same company controls the content and the distribution.) Siracusa says an iBookstore version probably isn’t in the cards, irony of ironies.Īt the moment, only paying Ars Premier subscribers can download ebook versions, in unrestricted. Apple’s review process could take two weeks. As for an iBookstore version, Ars wouldn’t have been able to even submit the book to Apple for review if it wanted to until today, because the content was protected by NDA until Mountain Lion’s public release. But a technical problem lasting several hours prevented iPad users from opening the book in the Kindle app.)Īmazon has a simpler and quicker process for publishing an ebook than Apple, but Ars “incorrectly predicted the publication lag time,” meaning Ars is missing out on the critical first wave of nerdy excitement. ( Update: Amazon approved the Kindle version on Wednesday night, according to a tweet from Siracusa at 5:55 p.m. Siracusa’s review went live a few hours ago, but the ebook is nowhere to be found on what would seem to be the two most important ebook stores for it: Apple’s iBookstore and Amazon’s Kindle. The utopian vision of ebook publishing - instantaneous publishing across platforms, bug-free production - is still a ways away.

kindle for mac 10.8

Unfortunately, the process of producing and selling an ebook, like the initial release of a major operating system, is still a little buggy.

kindle for mac 10.8

“This time we were careful to structure an agreement that would explicitly compensate John for each purchase,” Fisher said. Siracusa did not share in those profits, because Ars had negotiated a one-time fee with Siracusa upfront they’d never done this before, and no one was sure how well it would go. “The ebook format proved rather popular last year, so we’ve taken extra care this year to make the ebook version every bit as good as the web version,” said Ken Fisher, Ars Technica’s founder and editor, in an email.įisher said Ars sold “several thousand” paid copies of the Lion review in total, but he wouldn’t provide a specific number.

kindle for mac 10.8

With the release of Apple’s OS X 10.8 (Mountain Lion) today, Ars is trying out the hybrid free-paid model again for Siracusa’s 26,000-word review. ( Siracusa’s reviews are legendary among Mac nerds for their depth, precision, and length.) After 24 hours, Ars had sold 3,000 copies.

#Kindle for mac 10.8 mac os x#

Almost exactly a year ago, when Apple released Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion), Ars Technica put a spin on a time-honored tradition: The website published John Siracusa’s epic review of the software free of charge, as always, but also sold the tome as a $4.99 ebook.









Kindle for mac 10.8