Amazon Kindle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amazon Kindle is a software and hardware platform developed by Amazon.com subsidiary Lab126 for rendering and displaying e-books and other digital media.
Comparison of e-book formats - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, several e-Book formats including the Amazon Kindle, Open eBook, Compressed HM, Mobipocket and IDPF/EPUB use one HTML file for each book chapter and then Zip compress the ...
Amazon Kindle - ProductWiki unbiased product reviews
The Amazon Kindle is a wireless eBook reader that allows you to download and read books, newspapers and notable blogs on-the-go. It does not require you to first have the book ...
YouTube - Amazon Kindle
Here is the review for the Amazon Kindle. The Amazon Kindle is available on Amazon.com for $399.99 It uses the Sprint EVDO network to access data much like a cell phone without a ...
Amazon Kindle » Amazon Kindle
Fans of Amazon’s Kindle e-book reader have plenty of content from which to choose. Amazon offers over 260,000 (as of this writing) e-books, newspapers, magazines, and other ...
Kindle
The Kindle is an e-book reader created and sold by Amazon.com. Content is downloaded via Amazon Whispernet. The original version featured a six-inch diagonal display with 800 x ...
Kindle DX goes on sale at Amazon.com for $489
The Kindle DX started shipping from Amazon.com on Wednesday, as promised and could reach customers Thursday when initial owner reviews are expected to start hitting blogs and ...
Amazon Kindle, Kindle 2 And Kindle DX Blog
On this blog we will track down the latest Amazon Kindle news. We will keep you up to date with whats hot in the bestsellers section, including books, ebooks and blogs... and we ...
Amazon Erases Orwell Books From Kindle Devices - NYTimes.com
An Amazon spokesman said that “1984” and “Animal Farm” were added to the Kindle store by a company that did not have rights to them, using a self-service function.
Kindle -- Engadget
Amazon has just expanded the potential audience for its ebook format by a few orders of magnitude with the Beta release of its free Kindle for PC application.