Autor: Gotthold Ephraim Lessing Preis: 1,99 EUR Erschienen: Editura GmbH 2009, 142 Seiten Kategorie: Klassiker Format: eBook im ePub Format (559 kB) In den Warenkorb Demo Download Ein dramatisches Gedicht in fünf Aufzügen Gotthold Ephraim Lessing:
-- Nikkei Electronics Asia --May 2010 "Brand-new e-book readers like the Reader Daily Edition from Sony and the nook from Barnes & Noble differentiate themselves from Amazon.coms Kindle series through operability and the user interface."
| Philadelphia Inquirer | 05/26/2010 "I would use my Kindle at the beach or the pool and my iPad in bed or on an airplane," says Doug Alexander, who has been a digital reader since the release of the first-generation Kindle in 2007. What he doesn't like a
Digital Accessible Information System, or DAISY, is a means of creating digital talking books for people who wish to hear—and navigate—written material presented in an audible format; many such listeners have "print disabilities," including blindness, imp
"We are a community of people crazy enough to build our own book scanners. We also write Free software for book scanning. We are the missing link between your bookshelf and your e-reader. Join us! Get involved by trying a simple scanner, or push the limits of scanning technology."
Publit Sweden AB gör det ständigt enklare att publicera böcker. Publit samarbetar idag med flera av Sveriges ledande bokförlag. Iceberg är utvecklat av det amerikanska företaget ScrollMotion. Till skillnad från till exempel Stanza, som använder kataloger, ligger läsaren i själva boken. Iceberg har snabbt vunnit marknadsandelar och ägnades särskild uppmärksamhet på Apples årliga utveckarkonferens i augusti.
Wired, by Angela Watercutter, May 11, 2011: About the The Joe and Rika Mansueto Library, The underground storage facility at the University of Chicago's new Mansueto Library holds 3.5 million volumes that can be accessed by robotic cranes. "...research at the university has shown that the more people look to digital resources, the more they consult physical materials as well, according to Judith Nadler, director of the University of Chicago Library. "
Publishers Weekly 17 May 2013: "Using a combination of voice commands (“take a photo”) and the touchpad, a user can do a google search and get answers or ask for turn-by-turn directions to your hotel, as van der Lingen outlined to our group during the demo. As we noted earlier, there are a lot of things Google Glass does not do. Indeed, it does not call up web pages like a computer (you can’t “click” hyperlinks—there are none), you cannot run “apps” on it and currently there is almost no content designed specifically for it, although the New York Times provides headlines and short abstracts of its daily issue though nothing with any detail. That said, Google Glass mostly works. Of course the notion of “reading” a book on the tiny hovering screen seems beyond possible at this point but this is the earliest iteration of Google Glass and who knows what further development will bring?"