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iBooksCurrent Version: 2.1.1

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iBooks is an amazing way to download and read books. iBooks includes the iBookstore, where you can download the latest bestselling books or your favorite classics – day or night. Browse your library on a beautiful bookshelf, tap a book to open it, flip through pages with a swipe or a tap, and bookmark or add notes to your favorite passages.

Features:

• Download many of your favorite books from the included iBookstore
• In addition to standard text, the iBookstore also offers books that are fully illustrated, and enhanced with audio, video, and animation
• Experience gorgeous fullscreen Multi-Touch textbooks designed for iPad. These textbooks are filled with interactive features, diagrams, photos, videos, and more
• Read a free sample of any book on the iBookstore before making it a part of your collection
• Reorder your books on your bookshelf or browse them in a list sorted by title, author, or category
• Organize your books and PDFs into personal Collections. Swipe left or right to jump between Collections
• Easily adjust your screen brightness to find the perfect lighting for any environment
• Change the font size and pick from six included type faces to make your books more comfortable to read
• Find a word, character, or phrase anywhere in your book with the built-in search feature
• Keep your bookmarks, notes, and your current page wirelessly in sync between iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch with the automatic
bookmark syncing feature
• Quickly find a specific page using the page navigator at the bottom of every page
• Read your books on white or sepia colored pages
• Switch to full screen to remove all distractions, or read in white-on-black with the nighttime mode
• Choose left or fully justified text layout from Settings
• Highlight your favorite passages and add notes with the built-in bookmarking features
• Add books in the industry-standard ePub electronic book format to iTunes and sync them to iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch
• Add PDF documents to iBooks from Mail, or add them to iTunes and sync them to iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch
• Print PDF documents and notes you've written in iBooks using AirPrint
• Use iBooks with the amazing accessibility features in iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch – such as speaking the words on a given page

Requirements:

• iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch must have iOS 4.2 or later
• An Apple ID is required to download from the iBookstore
• Automatic bookmark syncing requires an active Wi-Fi or cellular data connection and an Apple ID
• iBooks opens books made with iBooks Author, ePub books, or PDF documents
• To add books from outside the iBookstore, they must be DRM-free and synced using iTunes 9.2 or later. To sync books made with iBooks Author, they must be synced with iTunes 10.5.3 or later.
• iBooks textbooks can only be viewed on iPad and are currently available to customers in the United States
• Some PDF documents may not be compatible with iBooks
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iBooks Screenshots


iBooks Review

New browsing experience impresses, though there are flaws

Whenever I’m asked to review an e-reading app, my first reaction hovers around snarky amusement. “Come on,” I say to myself. “If it shows text and you can read books, it’s a fine e-reader.” That I conduct this inner monologue each time I’m charged with such a review is clearly a personal failing—especially because I’m wrong. The ideal e-reading app should become as invisible as a paper book can, but not shy away from offering the advantages that only digital books can.

Last week, Apple unveiled iBooks 2. If you generally use the app on an iPod touch or an iPhone, iBooks 2 offers virtually no improvements over its predecessor. The bulk of the improvements Apple made to the app are limited to the iPad.

The big news with iBooks 2 was Apple’s introduction of iBooks interactive textbooks, along with the new Mac app iBooks Author to create those media-rich, interactive ebooks. The new textbook format—or any book created with iBooks Author—works exclusively on the iPad.


This, That, and the Author: Textbooks, or any other fancy book made with iBooks Author, can contain interactive elements. But they're also a bit limited—you can't adjust fonts or font sizes in this view, for example.

Thus, iBooks on the iPad now feels a bit like two apps smushed together. There’s the iBooks of old, for reading basic books with text and images, and then there’s iBooks 2 for reading and interacting with these new, multimedia-laden iBooks Author books. For the purposes of this review, let’s refer to the original kind as regular ebooks, and the new ones as optimized ebooks.

To test out the optimized ebooks, I downloaded several from the iBookstore built into the iBooks app. The first thing you’ll note about optimized ebooks is that their file sizes are much, much larger than traditional ebooks. Tolstoy’s 1300 page War and Peace (a regular ebook) downloaded to iBooks in about five seconds on my iPad; it’s 2.3MB. E.O. Wilson’s Life on Earth, an optimized textbook of which just 51 pages are available, weighs in at 965.3MB. It took a lot longer to download.

If you do the math, that puts War and Peace at about 1.8 kilobytes per page, to Life On Earth’s 19 megabytes per page. It’s not surprising that textbooks crammed with 3D models, movies, and other interactive elements would be huge, but it’s something to keep in mind, particularly if you use a 16GB iPad or a slower Internet connection.


That's Hot: An interactive map from Life On Earth showing global temperatures over time.

The good news about optimized textbooks like Life On Earth is that they really are beautiful. The experience of reading the books is cruft-free; the original iBooks theme that wasted screen real estate showing a skeumorphic bookbinding as you read is nowhere to be found in fancy reading mode. Gone too are the overwrought page turning animations, as pages simply slide into view as you swipe—it’s very similar to the Kindle app’s page-turning experience. (A previous update to the iBooks app offered an option to disable the virtual book look when reading a regular ebook; look for Full Screen under Theme in the Font menu.)

Though obviously this depends on how the author prepares your fancy textbook, all the launch textbooks currently available offer impeccable, incredible design. Tapping to play a movie, or using your fingers to explore a 3D model or interactive graph, is very cool.

Unfortunately, though, because of how carefully laid-out these optimized ebooks must be, the ebooks themselves aren’t as flexible as regular ebooks. You can’t, for example, adjust the font or font-size when you’re reading an optimized book, since that would mess up the formatting. (It would also mean that if an instructor asked you to turn to page 27, your page 27 might be different from your classmate’s—no good for the intended classroom audience.)


Why The Long Face: When you read optimized ebooks in portrait view, iBooks allows you to resize the text as desired.

The sole exception to this font manipulation limitation occurs when you rotate your iPad from landscape to portrait. When you do that, you bid farewell to the fancy book’s fanciful layout, and instead get a view more akin to one that Instapaper or Safari Reader might provide. All the interactive elements get pulled out to the left margin, with the text flowing across the rest of the screen. Instead of turning pages, you simply keep swiping vertically—again, just like in Instapaper.

In this view, you can freely adjust the font and font size. In most of the textbooks I sampled, the font size used in the fancier landscape view was readable, but smaller than my old man eyes might prefer for lengthy reading; that I can adjust the font size in portrait mode is a welcome nicety. And since the portrait view doesn’t use a page-turning mechanism, it can keep page numbers consistent. Page 17 might be two feet long if you measured it out, but all the text that should be associated with that page number is.

When you’re reading optimized ebooks, you get access to iBooks’s new highlighting features. All you need to do is tap and drag over text to highlight it. Tap the highlighted text to change its highlight color (or switch to underlining), or to add a note. When you’re reading a regular book, this same gesture merely selects the text, at which point you can choose whether to highlight it or not.

To select text in optimized books, you can either double-tap, or tap and hold without moving your finger while holding until the selection interface appears. Only by selecting text—as opposed to highlighting it—can you bring up the option to see a word’s inline definition.


Target Practice: You might have no problem tapping the tiny Note icon in the margin. Or you might wind up unintentionally turning the page when you try to tap it.

When you add a note to highlighted text, a tiny note icon is added to the page’s margin. Delicate-fingered folk should have no problem tapping the tiny icon, but fatter-fingered folk like me might accidentally turn the ebook’s page (in landscape view) if they inadvertently tap elsewhere in the margin. Switching to portrait view eliminates that problem, since you don’t tap to turn pages in that mode, on the optimized ebook side. If you’re attempting to review notes in a landscape mode or while reading a regular book and you find the tiny tap target too small to hit with any accuracy, you can instead tap once on the highlighted text the note is linked to, and then on the easier-to-reach Notes icon that appears.

iBooks already offered a screen that consolidates all of your notes and highlights for a given book. While that screen now looks slightly different depending upon whether you’re reading a regular or optimized book, it remains tremendously helpful either way. New in iBooks 2—but limited to optimized books—is a Notecard view.


Take Note: Notecards offer a clever way to review and study notes and highlights. Disappointingly, though, they're limited to optimized books; regular ebooks need not apply.

The new view groups your highlights and notes into virtual notecards, with your highlights on one side and your notes on the other. You can shuffle the notecards to test yourself, and even limit the cards to highlights of a specific color. And you can optionally include glossary terms from the book in the notecards—words on one side, definitions on the other. It’s a shame you can’t use notecards to study notes taken in regular books, and I can’t imagine the limitation is a technical one; it’s simply a feature Apple has only chosen to make available for optimized ebooks.

Notecards do suffer from one frustrating oversight: You can’t jump from a notecard directly to the highlighted text in context within the ebook. You can do so from the more traditional notes view, and it’s a great way to dive in when you’re reviewing your notes. Apple at least includes the page number as a reference on the notecards, and since iBooks 2 introduces the ability to use the search field to jump to a specific page, all is not lost. But a direct link from card to associated book page would eliminate a couple steps.

In an optimized ebook, a two- or three-finger pinch takes you from your current page back to the Chapter overview screen. That screen provides links to subsections within the chapter, along with thumbnail-based page navigation. (You can pinch with more fingers if you disable multitasking gestures in the Settings app.) In a regular book, you instead tap to bring up the menu, and then tap the navigation icon, and then tap for the Table of Contents.

Besides their far smaller file size, regular books in iBooks offer a significant advantage compared to their fancy book brethren, perhaps the best reading-centric feature iBooks offers—a small text indicator stating how many pages remain in the current chapter. One key advantage paper books hold over ebooks is the ease with which you can flip ahead to find a good stopping point; the “pages left in this chapter” indicator offers an excellent digital alternative—and it’s nowhere to be found when reading optimized ebooks.

Additionally, iBooks has never once crashed on me while I was using regular books, since I first started using the app. In less than a week of reading the occasional textbook, I encountered two crashes that left me staring at nothing but Apple’s stock linen background. I needed to force-quit the iBooks app and relaunch it to get back to reading. I have yet to reboot a paper book.

Those optimized books are so big that it sometimes takes even the iPad 2 some time to process them. When I tap Library to return to my bookshelf from a fancy textbook, iBooks takes a long moment to gather its thoughts before it takes me where I want to go. Returning to the library from War and Peace, on the other hand, is essentially instantaneous.

Beyond the handful of crashes, the missing “pages remaining” text, and the huge file sizes, the other knock against optimized books is their complete failure to work on the iPhone—it can’t be done. I’m not saying it would be easy, but Apple should be able to offer some means—likely inspired by the portrait view experience on the iPad—of fitting these books on the iPhone’s smaller screen. It’s a huge ebook advantage to be able to read another couple of pages while you’re waiting in line or somewhere else without your iPad. Sure, interactive elements might not be quite as easy to experience on the iPhone, but “not quite as easy” is far better than “not available at all.”

I said at the outset that my preference in e-reading apps is that they just get out of the way and let you read, while still packing in the advantages that their digital nature can afford. With regular books, iBooks succeeds.

With optimized books, the app succeeds too—but in a different way. It’s not at all complicated to read an optimized textbook in the app, and anyone familiar with an iOS device should mostly be able to navigate such a book without trouble. (The one gotcha is remembering the pinch gesture to get back to the Chapter view.) But you do need to examine each element on the page to know what it can do: Is this just a photo, or is it a slideshow, or a model, or an animation, or a video, or something else? Again, it’s not hard to answer such questions—you just look at the interactive element’s description to see what it does. It’s a different way of reading, and it makes the books feel much more like exquisite webpages than texts. That’s not necessarily either good or bad—but it’s undeniably different from traditional reading. Where iBooks does a superb job getting out of your way as you read regular books, it screams “THIS IS AN IMMERSIVE MULTIMEDIA EXPERIENCE” when you read fancy ones.

If iBooks were two apps, I’d give the one for reading regular books a higher rating, and the optimized experience a still favorable-though-slightly qualified recommendation. And I’d feel conflicted about it, because when it works on the iPad, the optimized reading experience really is impressive. But the limitations—the occasional crashes, massive file sizes, missing “pages remaining” feature, and lack of iPhone support—mar an otherwise great experience.

[Lex Friedman is a staff writer for Macworld.]

Critic Reviews of iBooks iPhone App

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User Reviews of iBooks iPhone App

34 Macworld User Reviews
60893 iTunes User Reviews View »

Our user review snapshot

  • 62.0%
  • 71.0%
  • 73.0%
  • 63.0%

Our user reviews IN DETAIL:

iBooks could be better for folks with limited vision

Because it is so simple to operate, iPad *could* be a great ebook reader for elderly people with macular degeneration. Font size can be made very large. Unfortunately, at very large font sizes, line lengths in portrait mode are too short. In landscape mode, they are shorter still, because of the default two-page layout. Why doesn't Apple provide a way to select single-page layout in landscape? It's seems a no-brainer.


Next Best Thing to Holding a Paperback

As a former employee of a bookstore, I was hesitant to jump on the e-reader bandwagon. But you never know when an opportunity is going to arise when you have a few minutes to catch up on reading, and I always have my phone on me, so iBooks has been wonderful! The bookmark feature is extremely helpful, and I feel less like a traitor to actual books when I see my iBooks displayed on a "bookshelf."


Will all interactive books be categorized as textbooks?

Nice review. I agree that iBooks "now feels a bit like two apps smushed together." In fact, there doesn't appear to be a way for consumers to filter original iBooks from iBooks2. Unless everything created with iBooks Author will be dumped in the textbook category, and every other category will offer only the old format. Has anyone found a way to filter and view only iBooks2 books in the store?


Apple & Publishers price fixing

Unfortunately, when Apple entered the e-book market they colluded with the big 5 publishing houses to raise prices. This is why you've got to support Amazon and their larger collection.


iPhone Support

How can the lack of iPhone support mar a product not designed for it in the first place? Not everything can be adapted to a tiny screen. Carefully formatted text and images for the classroom requires more screen real estate than what the iPhone provides. This is simply the nature of the beast.


Great review

That was indeed a great review. However, I really think this comes handy on students and maybe by the near future, all books will be subbed with this. Even though I like reading, I always want music near me while doing things and I am planning to buy an iBook soon after I recently purchased a brand new Apple iPod Touch at this site http://portablemp3playersreviews.com. The reviews there were amazing and I bought it there as well. Isn't it fun reading and listening to a calm music at the same time?


Great for documentation

I find iBooks absolutely spectacular for keeping and accessing computer documentation, hardware and software. Between searching and book marks I can keep an amazing amount of PDF's in iBooks.


iBook reader doesn't measure up

on iPod Touch, iKindle is much more stable and reliable. iBook loses books so you get to re-load them instead of just read them. Books are expensive and searching is very poorly organized. iBook flips orientation slowly and quite inconsistently. iKindle is a no-brainer to use. Maybe there are some extra tricks for the iPad that make this app more appealing, but for iPod, it is a pain. Definitely not worth installing.


You need them all!

I have Kindle, Nook, Kobo, and iBooks on my iPad. The less slick they look, the more free books they have, but the choices are different. I don't like this PCWorld site for iPad, due to all the popups and ads (every part of the screen is a live button). Don't ever try to get a refund from iTunes though. The best policy is to never pay for content on the net. Try books.google.net!


Better than Stanza

For quite a while I was reading ebooks on my iPod Touch entirely with the Stanza app, then iPad came with iBooks. For some time I hesitated which way to go - Stanza vs. iBooks and finally iBooks ha won. I read both ePub books and PDF docs on iBooks and simply can't find any reason why should I switch to other app. There is only one kind of con, which is the app needs better support from Apple's iWork Pages application in terms of better converting from Pages to ePub format. PS. And please more books on the iBook store ;-)


Much Better Than I Expected

This ereader app is now my favourite of the half dozen is have on my Touch. The interface is clean and uncluttered, while still letting my navigate and change settings in a very intuitive way. I can immerse myself tin the book while not having to think about the container. I used to rate Stanza as my favourite, but now iBooks holds that place now.


Not bad.

This app has a simple and elegant user interface, and reading's not at all difficult. The bookshelf organization works, and now that we have Project Gutenberg integration, it's easy to catch up on summer reading. Overall, a 4/5.


not all it's cracked up to be

i bought my ipad with the primary use for books. i read alot and travel with a veritable library and i must say how dissapointed i am/was with ibooks available content. the app. itself is great. sexy, intuitive, flexible... all the things it should be and my current e-reader app (stanza) isn't. but - that said, there's no contemporary content! not the latest dan brown, stephen king... if it's not part of the gutenburg project (good thing this project!) then there's no content. I like classics any day - 3 musketeers is always a fun read in either the original french or english but i wanted more than just that content. so, colour me disappointed for now but like itunes, i'm sure that with time, the content will come. try stanza while waiting perhaps?


eBooks way too expensive

The main problem with iBooks is that the iBookstore is ridiculously expensive (at least here in the UK) with the digital books actually more expensive than real printed books. It is a complete rip off. Untill the price comes down considerably (i.e. cheaper than a printed book) I won't be using it. Furthermore the choice of books is lamentably few.


Bodstrup, no books in Denmark?

You can add your already owned ePub formatted books using iTunes! For example, you can download ePub books from Feedbooks.com and transfer them to iPhone via iTunes. Before you review something get more information first.


Awesome

Best app ever, very good, marvelous


Apple Makes Full Justification Worse in iBooks 1.1

Thanks for your review. I'm glad you pointed out the hidden option to turn off Full Justification in iBooks on the iPad. Unfortunately, with iBooks 1.1, Apple made it impossible for book designers to specify left-alignment. They can choose centered text and right-aligned text, but left alignment is ignored unless the reader goes and finds that hidden switch in the Settings. More info here: http://www.pigsgourdsandwikis.com/2010/06/apple-makes-full-justification-worse-in.html kind regards, Liz


No Books

Well, in Denmark there are a number of 'Project Gutenberg' books, old titles that my grandparents might have read. Searching for Iraq or Afghanistan gave me exactly 0 hits, on Amazon or Audible I get dozens. So, the app may be good, but with absolutely no content I care about it is of no value yet. Michael


Good and Bad

The good: 1. Easy to move in ePub and PDF documents in via iTunes. 2. Easy to adjust screen brightness for reading at night or in bright light. 3. Adequate feature set (i.e. highlighting). The Bad: 1. No Mac or PC versions yet. 2. No ability to publish PDF books via the iBookstore books. Given the current formatting weaknesses of ePub, that a necessity right now. Many books simply can't be done in ePub. 3. No Night theme like Stanza (light text on a dark background).


Familiar experience

The purpose of the iBooks app is to deliver you content from the iBook bookstore. Using the bookstore is like travelling back in time to the early days of the iTunes store - little content and few navigation and discovery options. In the recent update, the options have slightly increased, and the categories have become more sophisticated. But there's still not much going on - I have downloaded a couple of free books, and that is despite the fact that iBooks is the main reason I had been lusting after an iPad. I have spent a lot of time dotting between three iPad apps: iBooks, Kindle and Stanza. None of them have that much! I'm looking forward to the future, when most of the books (rather than two of the books) I want to read are available in ebook format.


When I got my iPad this was the first app I got....

And it was great!


Review it

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