Kindle Cloud Reader

Amazon today announced the availability of its Kindle Cloud Reader solution, a web app for accessing your purchased Kindle content and, perhaps as important, new eBooks via the Amazon Kindle eBook store.

You may recall that Amazon and other content providers had to recently change its app iPad/iOS in order to meet Apple's onerous requirement that the Cupertino consumer electronics giant gets a 30 percent cut of any revenues generated through such apps. This new web-based Kindle reader neatly bypasses that issue, and not coincidentally there is an iPad-specific version of the web app. There's also one for Google Chrome and the desktop version of Apple Safari, which works on Windows or the Mac. Here's a typical book displayed through this web app:

kindle_cloud_reader_0

Amazon notes that Kindle Cloud Reader automatically synchronizes your Kindle library, as well as your last page read, bookmarks, notes, and highlights for all of your Kindle books, as with all Kindle native apps. It also includes the following features:

  • An immersive view of your entire Kindle library, with instant access to all of your books
  • Start reading over 950,000 Kindle books instantly within your browser
  • An embedded Kindle Store optimized for your web browser makes it seamless to discover new books and start reading them instantly
  • New Kindle Store for iPad is built from the ground up for iPad's touch interface
  • Your current book is automatically made available for offline use, and you can choose to save a book for reading offline at any time
  • Receive automatic software updates without the need to download new software
  • Select any book to start reading, customize the page layout to your desired font size, text color, background color, and more
  • View all of the notes, highlights, and bookmarks that you've made on other Kindle apps or on Kindle
  • Sync your last page read across your Kindle and free Kindle apps so you can always pick up where you left off

Kindle Cloud Reader is available for Safari on iPad, Safari on desktop and Chrome starting today. You can find out more about this new Kindle app version on the Kindle Cloud Reader web site.

Discuss this Article 4

Bruno H
on Aug 10, 2011
I wonder what evil plans Apple is devicing in its dark dungeons to get rid of this little rebel web app. There wil be a way for Apple to squeeze 30% out of this one to, you just wait and see...
fgeraci
on Aug 10, 2011
Why doesn't it work with Internet Explorer? Who in the world uses Safari on the PC?
the_real_entheos
on Aug 11, 2011
I think it would be great if most "apps" moved to the web. They are web content transformed to work better with small screens. B4 all of the iOS appstore hype, the march to web apps was already in full swing. I still love native apps for the PC & phone in a lot of cases. I am sick of hearing blurbs from companies telling me about their Iphone or Android app and not WP7, when they could just create a reformat-able web content that would work on everything, including a PC.
jsepeta
on Aug 22, 2011
Nice work, using an example of the Cloud Reader app to slam the competing IOS platform. We're onto you, Thurrott! :P

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