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!

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