iBooks App & iBookstore
The new Apple iPad, as widely anticipated, will have an e-book reader built-in to the device. The iBooks app displays a bookshelf of all your titles alá Delicious Library or the Classics iPhone app. When you tap a book to read, you can tap on the right or left edge to flip the page or drag the page manually. When looking at your bookshelf, there is also a button to the iBook Store to purchase books.
The iBookstore will allow for browsing and purchasing books on the iPad. What is exciting is that this new feature will rely on the ePub standard rather than some proprietary Apple format. ePub was developed by the International Digital Publishing Forum and works on several devices and platforms like the Sony Reader and Adobe Digital Editions for your desktop computer. You can think of it as the “MP3″ of e-book formats.
Five large publishers (Penguin, Harper Collins, Macmillan, Hachette Book Group, and Simon & Schuster) announced support today and the store will be open to other publishers soon. Not surprisingly, McGraw-Hill was not on the list of large publishers today.
So is the iPad a Kindle Killer? I think the biggest advantage that Apple will bring to the e-book reader market is a reading experience that is on par with the Amazon Kindle, but on a multi-purpose device that will have wider appeal. Apple has absolutely nailed the relationship between devices and content stores in the past with the iPod / iTunes Music Store and the iPhone / App Store and I expect that the iPad will nail the e-book experience on both the device and the store.
Sure the iPad starts at $499 and the Kindle starts at $259 and the “E Ink” display is nicer to use outside, but I think a lot of people will consider the extra $240 well spent to get all the extra features of the iPad. When you consider that the iPad offers a full-color LCD screen that can also support video embedded in the iBooks app, I think the iPad will be the biggest e-reader device yet. It will just appeal to a wider audience. The Amazon Kindle is dead.
I am looking forward to curling up with one of these to see what the experience is like. I wonder if the Apple Store will stock the Maxell Blown Away chair that Steve was using on stage to go with it as an accessory?
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When you say “Not surprisingly, McGraw-Hill was not on the list of large publishers today” are you suggesting that they got bumped from iBooks at the last minute as some sort of punishment for spilling the beans? With Apple poised to get a cut from every book sold, I find that very hard to believe.
Hi. There. David. The. Demo. Is. Only. Hours. Long. You. Can’t. List. Every. Book. Wesite. Ect. Ect. Ect. It. Would. Take. More. Time. In. The. Unaverse. You. Have. Too. Give. Short. Preasation. Too. Other. Stuff. If. You. Read for. 500. Years. No. Consumer. Be paying. Atenchen. Shure. They. Also. Forgot. Magazines. Or. Books. And. Magazines. With. Video. Possibels. No. Body. Can cover. Every. Thing. In. The unaverse. Not. Even. The. Borg. Colective
David – Just a little tongue-in-cheek inside reference for those that have been following all the buildup to the event. I agree that they won’t keep anyone out of the iBook Store once it is opened up. There was that kerfuffle with Wiley over the iCon book, but I don’t think they will exert that control over e-books.
So, going by the description, I *would* be able to buy books from the Apple bookstore and load them on my Sony Reader (505 – ePub capable). Very nice! Gives me a reason to shop from Apple without having an iPad (which looks very tempting, I will admit)
@Lianne – We don’t have any information yet, but I would expect DRM on the titles purchased from the iBook Store. What you should be able to do is load any of the thousands of ePub titles without DRM on the iPad.
I wonder what textbook selection will be available?
If there was a large selection of book s made available (especially med and law school books!) this would be a killer device!
I also wonder if we will be able to also somehow sync books to macbooks as well to read them on our laptops too??
wow i agree! if it covered all my textbooks in school i would drop everything to buy it… can you imagine walking to class with just a “ipad” and maybe a pen…. but it would cover everything! Note taking… internet…. email… im just in awe! im sure steve jobs thought of this. hopefully it all works out!
I want ! I want !I want !I want !I want !I want !I want !I want !I want !I want !I want !
At $499 the notebook is obsolete , the eReaders and the smartphone for the smart folks. No more $100 phone bills just $30 talk $30 iPad web. Go ahead and close the Kindle factory.
Nobody cares about reading in the sun BTW.
Are you serious? You’ve never read by a swimming pool? Outdoors? Do you live in a cave?
I know with LCD reading in the sunlight is a pain. Will the iPad somehow have a lighting feature to allow that?
Anybody know if the ipad will be able to read the books aloud? Will you be able to download microsoft office?
That’s a great question about text to speech in the iBooks app. iWork for iPad will open (and edit) Microsoft Office files.
Aw Nicole, do you really want Office? Flip to iWork for a better experience or even OpenOffice for a compatible but free experience! I have the iPhone and can read Word, Excel and Powerpoint on that, iWork for iPad will be brilliant on the larger screen. By the way, I work as a consultant and almost always edit or share Office files with my clients, but I always use iWork on my Mac.
I doubt it will read the books. That crosses a whole new realm that is outside the publishing rights.
Some books will include audio. just buy audio books on the itunes store if you want them to be read to you. why would a mac use something microsoft made? they make keynote, pages, and numbers for the ipad which are like powerpoint, word, and excel. these are10 dollars each and will sync to the ones on your mac. all these applications are part of iwork.
Now really, you want something to read to you. those are called audio books, they already exist, for those who are visually impaired and those who cannot read. I am all for technology, I began looking here because I was interested in a similar device, but part of the reading experience is the actual READING. let me read on my own,with my own emphasis on what ever word i choose, let my imagination run wild with what my interpretation of the words mean. outside is good, but even by an open window there is a glare. i think text books are a great idea, less back pain and loosing one of the books, save a tree and all of that.
What about newspapers? Kindle allows you to purchase a newspaper (and/or magazine) subscription that can have issues automatically pushed to the device. You wake up in the morning and your digital paper has already been delivered (to your Kindle). Will the iBook store offer something similar? Or will everything be pull only?
The Kindle magazines suck and they are done in ePub. I just want a standard PDF magazine – Pictures! – great layout – The new ePub standard works great for ebooks that are 99% print…but sucks for real rich graphic content publications. Ditch it and let us purchase PDF magazines from the store. That would get me to buy this device.
I think it’s not quite time to call the Kindle dead. For one, it’s going to be difficult to read this screen for more than an hour before eyestrain sits in. That’s been the case for most readers on any backlit display. Second, the Kindle allows for your own files – txt, rtf, word doc, and pdf. We haven’t quite seen what the iPad’s ability is there (hopefully it will be akin to music on the Itunes, but give the bookstore and bookshelf are self contained in the iBooks app, maybe not…)
Does anyone know what the iBooks will cost?
Steve showed Kennedy’s book priced at $15 during the demo
Will you be able to place bookmarks on a page and take any notations in the margins? I haven’t seen any examples or news in regards to this. I think these little features would be a necessity when it comes to text books.
I hope Apple will resolve some of these questions before it’s made available for purchase.
No details yet, but these are great questions. I’d love to see highlighting too.
In addition to the higlighting (and I think there’s a third-party app already doing this) it’d be IDEAL for students to then see all their highlighted notes summarized. Imagine each chapter you have your Coles Notes summary of the key points to study. Voila, you’re done. As everywhere!
I save documents in a word format and have it sent to my kindle so that I can read. Can word documents be read on the iPad too?
You’ll still be able to do your own docs with 3rd party apps even if they aren’t natively supported in the Apple iBooks app. Check out the GoodReader app for the iPhone. Of course, since iBooks supports ePub, I would expect that they would allow ebooks from other sources too. Otherwise, why not just use a proprietary format?
There’s a filesharing preference that was present in the demo units today that might help with transferring documents too.
Wouldn’t Pages just open ALL Word docs? And presto, you’re reading your Word docs. You can even edit and then save/export the Word doc again probably.
So there’s no news yet on whether there’ll be an ibook app for the iphone, or whether you’ll be able to download ibooks for reading on something like, say, Stanza on iphone?
Nothing yet on iBooks for iPhone, but I suspect we’ll see it eventually. I just don’t see Apple passing up the opportunity to sell you digital content if you want it. Still, the best experience is definitely going to be on the iPad.
I don’t see Apple allowing their ebooks to be used outside the iBooks app. You should be able to use 3rd-party books in their own reader (no reason that the Kindle Reader app won’t continue to work on the iPad, right?) or free ePub books in the iBooks app (just like you can use MP3′s in iTunes).
I just downloaded an iBookstore app from iTunes. However, it didn’t sync to my iPhone because I have a 3G with an older version.
How can I publish my own books and articles on the iBooks store?
No details yet, but Steve said that info on publishing would be “coming soon”
I want publish my book too…
https://itunesconnect.apple.com/WebObjects/iTunesConnect.woa/wo/8.0.0.5.7.7.1
This looks like a phishing website, designed to gain access to your iTunes account!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
When will iBook store go live & is it just US? Sounds great – looking at it as tool for teaching in Aussie classrooms
No commitment yet, but I would be surprised if the iBookstore didn’t launch with the iPad in March. No word on stores outside the US yet.
There are rumors all over the net about iBook store only being for the US. Will this mean we won’t be able to download from outside the US even if we have a US iTunes account? I can purchase music and movies from the iTunes site from outside the US, but pay with my US iTunes account! This makes a difference for those of us who travel internationally a lot and spend months outside the US. Any inside info on that yet?
As the iPad has full internet access I might buy books at ebooks.com or at any other ebookshop worldwide. I’m not stacked to Apples iBook store. Question is wether the iPad allows me to read them in the same my Sony reader does.
Maybe elswhere bought books ar not so nice on te shelf, but as long as I can read them that will be OK with me.
What is also interesting is the 3g capability of the iPad. That makes the iPad a mobile phone too, although I have the impression that there is no phone app on the iPad. Something to develop?
A major key will textbooks. Imagine any college students who could download all their texts, use iWork for all the work they need to do and then have all the social and entertainment media in one device that will fit in a purse or book bag. Killer!!!
I have 5 ebooks ready and another 65 ebooks almost ready for publishing as iBooks. So how do I find out where to do this?
Same here. This sounds really good for us indie publishers. Finding out who to contact at Apple hasn’t proven easy.
Really…..it was just released yesterday. They are not going to give you all the answers in one day. Then there’s no suspense! Apple knows what they’re doing and how to keep the interest going!! These will fly off the shelves as they come out!!!
How do new publishers submit titles for the Ibook ?
Jobs said it would be open later in the afternoon, but we see nothing on the Apple site yet.
I love the fact that I can read books I buy from Amazon.com and eReader on the Ipod Touch. I hope I can continue to use those readers too, or at least use the new Ibooks reader for the dozens of books I’ve already bought over the years from eReader and Amazon. If not, I may just stick with the Ipod Touch and not move on up to the pad.
At $15 a book through the Apple book store compared to $9.99 for most new books at Amazon for Kindles, you certainly let that huge difference slip by without much comment. I think that pricing difference is going to mean a lot competitively. Consumers don’t like being ripped off.
Also, Amazon has over 400,000 books available for download onto the Kindle, including many free books. I own a Kindle and an iPhone and can read my books on either.
I want to know if iPad is going to allow book downloads from other than their own store.
That’s my question too, Mimi. I certainly hope so. It would make a really good reason to go ahead and buy the pad.
I didn’t want to make too much of the pricing because at the time of publication we hardly knew anything. We still don’t really. Of course, there is no info on the Apple site about pricing and who knows if the values seen in the demo are all just placeholders or real prices. I’m eager to find out myself.
Hi. There. Wounder. How. Long. It. Would. Take. Too. List. All. 400,000. E-books. For. The. Kindel. That’s. Why. They. Don’t. List. Every. Book. Or. Ever. Website. At. The. Prsentations. At. Average. 4. Minutes. Per. Book. That’s. 1.7. Million. Hours. Of. Reading. Or. 1,700,000. Hours
I’m with you on the Kindle question. I love being able to go back and forth between my iPhone and Kindle. And I have quite a few books downloaded to the Kindle. I love the idea of everything in one place though.
I really hope it has text-to-speech capability, and I hope that capability is a step up from what you get on Kindle.
I have a Bebook ! it dis[plays multiple formats and having e ink screen makes it very easy on the eyes . just like a paperback really.
I can leave it on for a week and the battery doesn’t go flat as it only draws power when you turn the page. Ipad doesn’t compare to that even remotely.
The only drawback is it is not in color.
I think they should have put a second screen with e ink on the back maybe and it would be indisputably the holy grail of ebook readers. The extra cost would have been well worth it.
Also i hear it isn’t flash compatible which rules out the majority of web based videos and applications (I hope this is not true).
I say the more the merrier! It’s nice to have different options to choose for readers. I wish there is an online bookstore that sells ebooks synchronized with their audio versions.
I can’t wait to see my favorite books, for example ‘Somewhere carnal over 40 winks’, available on iBookstore!
I have around 50 books ready and i am looking for solution to convert them for Ibook ?
Regarding the $15.00 per book, maybe they could have 2 tiered pricing. $15.00 while it in Hardcover release and then reduce to $7.00 when the book is issued in Paperback format. For the publishers, that would match what they do in the “paper” world and would make good financial sense in the eyes of the consumer.
The iPad will one day be very popular; Apple, Inc. is watching and listening. The biggest jump will be when text books are provided on iBooks and school and university book stores get involved with their own download percentages.
You said videos would be embedded in iBooks app. Do you mean that the books in iBooks will have videos embedded in them? If yes, we can see a video in a small frame on some page of the eBook/ePub?
That is possible in ePub documents, but we don’t know how the iBooks app will support those features or things like CSS styling.
hi there you are right i have seen it at the apple web site at http://www.apple.com click keynote last about 90 minutes or 1 hour and 30 minutes but they could add movies and video games inside the books as well as a 5 videos and the book multi-tasking too a hole new level
For price argument article should really compare larger version of Kindle DX that matches the size of iPad. At $489 vs $499 this is no-brainer in my opinion.
I considered that, but I wanted to focus on the entry level pricing in this first take. I think the price comparisons will become a lot more clear as we get close to the iPad launch and we see how the market (Amazon in particular) reacts.
i have been trying to find a place on apple’s site (or anywhere else) where to sign up to PUBLISH an iBook and have it in the iBookstore when it opens.
haven’t found it, even a week later there is no info whatsoever about this.
this will be an amazing platform for independent publishers, especially for photography / color books like …
http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/invited/624606/2a0191e9d29c09e226f0dffc12b31877
would love to have it (or rather a smaller version of it) in the ibookstore when it starts…
anyone have a contact for apple’s ibookstore?
thanks
tomas
hello dose this product support *.doc or *.pdf file format in ibook?
can i read this formats in IPAD thanks very much
We don’t know if the iBooks app will support those formats, but there are several iPhone apps that do and those should run on the iPad.
“a reading experience that is on par with the Amazon Kindle”
Erm. Dude! You don’t read a whole lot, do you? Sure, the iPad is a multipurpose-device, but I wouldn’t want to *read* on it. See, reading, for some people, means reading _all_ the content in a 800 pages book, from page 1 to 799. It does not mean quickly browsing through some colorful magazine, look at pictures and read 2 lines here and there.
No offense, but all these judgements and assessments by people who don’t actually know the meaning of the word reading are becoming incredibly annoying. Buy the iPad if you like it (I find it very disappointing, as it is just a supersized iPhone with _nothing_ new), but don’t compare it to devices from a totally different class.
I love when people leave personal attacks (don’t read, don’t know the meaning of the word, etc.) and then say, “no offense…” as though that makes it OK to drop insults. Have fun with your Kindle and thanks for dropping by.
I love it when people have no clue about something, but still feel obliged to write about it and pass judgement on it.
Also, I fail to understand why you would feel offended, as it was your god, el jobso, who said that people don’t read anymore anyway ;)
I don’t have a kindle, by the way, as it has too many disadvantages at the moment.
Care to explain why you think the “reading experience is on par with the kindle” even though the display technologies are totally different? That would be a more mature response than just complaining about how mean comments are.
Have fun with your iPod-large, and thanks for being so impartial ;)
If you have the kindle for iphone app can you use it on the ipad and get cheaper books?
You should be able to use the Kindle app on the iPad (it runs iPhone apps), but it remains to be seen what pricing will be like. The iPad introduction showed books at price points from $7 to $15 with many at $12-13.
I agree that iPad could be perfect for textbooks. Also, once ordinary authors are allowed to submit, it might become the biggest single source for eBooks, as popular as iTunes is for music. If you had a dream of publishing yourself, that will be the easy and the least expensive way. I am sure Apple will make both buying and submitting very user friendly. There is even a community out there that’s already discussing the steps and technicalities of preparing and submitting a book to iBookStore in EPUB format:
http://www.ibookstoreworld.com
At one point, no one could believe that Apple would allow ordinary programmers to submit apps for the iPhone, but Apple did it. Everyone should be able to submit to iBookStore within the very near future.
Hi. There. Some. One. Said. There. Was. A. Publisher. That. Did. Not. Made. The. Cut. Remember. These. Presatations. Are. Limited. Too. Like. 5. Hours. Per. Product. I. Think. If. Apple. List. All. 140,000,000. Books. It. Would. Take. Unitl. Star. Date. 2495. That’s. Almost. 500. Years. At. An. Average. Of. 5. Minutes. Per. Book. The. Time. Too. List. All. Web. Sites. On. The. Internet. Probaly. Takes. Internaty. Soo. Hummans. Can. Not. Out live. God. Or reverse death or. Have. Infint. Lives. Eather.
Is there anything available yet on what the prices of the books will be? How will the pricing compare to Kindle? That is one of the things that attracted me to eBooks — pricing and portability. I also wonder if the iPad will allow for resizing of eBooks )sorry, iBooks) and if the original pagination will be kept. That is one of the things that bothers me about Kindle. when I resize, I never know what original page I am on compared to the original print version. In my profession, as a Library Media Specialist, that is important for teaching purposes. It will also be an important question teachers and students alike will have.
I currently read books on my iPhone using the Amazon Kindle app. I love it. It’s easy to read on the iPhone and I always have it with me. If Apple doesn’t offer a similar feature, regrettably I will be spending money at Amazon for my books.
I’m curious whether as a blogger I’ll be able to publish my blog through the iBookstore, as I can via Amazon for the Kindle. I’m seeing some surprisingly good revenue from them.
hi there wounder if this ibook app will also run on the ipod touch i have a 64 gb ipod touch should run on both systems i will be buying the ipad on day one just a intersting question i will also be buying the wi-fi 64 gb ipad too go along with the 64 gb ipod touch i like equal storage soo non of them runs out later or earlier then the other device
What about out of print books? It’d be great if there was a mechanism for customers to request an out of print book to be re-released. If they had a counter on each book request, we could review the requests and flag the ones we wanted, too. Then the ubiquitous “they” could take the public demand to the publisher and see about getting it released again.
I work at a small publishing house and would like to know how to upload our books to the e-book store. How do we submit our books? Anyone have this information??
I pre-ordered an iPad, 64GB WIFI. And I’m stoked. I love books and I had always hope the books, regardless what source would be cheaper. They just seem too expensive.
Now I’ll read an ibook and enjoy it as much as I would a hard cover. But if I can go down the block at the public library and get free books, that’s better for me. I can get a book for 3 weeks, plenty of time – in fact I could read a half a dozen books in 3 weeks.
Maybe if they have some cheaper older books or, as someone suggested, out of print books. That would be a nice option. Nonetheless great stuff coming and I can’t wait.
Later .. ;)
Where do I find the list of books available to download to an I Pad.
Apple should release a website that catalogs their e-books. A user can purchase a book and it can be synched to the iPad.
I agree Mark. I would love to purchase books on my larger computer, since I can then multi-task. I’m also more likely to add in my companies reviews on more titles. We do over 200 book reviews a month and would love to have those in the iBooks store to help readers find the best purchases. As it is not…it slow going changing programs and copy / pasting.
I would also like to have my PDF’s flip pages…all in one iBooks program. For now I got a PDF reader app.
Do you know if there are books in spanish??
I LOVE THE IPAD, IT IS SO COOL BUT I WOULD LIKE TO KNOW ONE THING. CAN YOU WATCH TV ON THE IPAD? IF YOU CAN I WILL BE ONE OF THE FIRST PEOPLE TO BUY THE IPAD.
I ALSO HAVE ANOTHER QUESTION. WILL THERE BE ANOTHER VERSION OF A IPAD WITH A CAMERA AND USB CONNECTOR?
ANYWAY I AM LOOKING FORWARD TO GETTING MY BRAND NEW IPAD AND CANT WAIT FOR MY QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED!
I can say that Net Flix’s does work on the iPad…and it’s wonderful. I get streaming shows and movies.
It’s not like live TV…but has most of my favorite shows…without all the commercials. Plus it’s only around $10 a month.
can you download college books on this? such as math and science books? because i am about to head off for college and the ipad would be a huge help enabling me to carry 1.5lbs of ipad over 35lbs of books.
Hi Lucas,
I think you will need to check with the college you are planning on attending to see if the books you will need are going to be available as eBooks. If not this year maybe next year they will be ready for this cool new book option.
I hope for your sake that the books will be available as eBooks. That would have been so awesome when I was going to college a few years ago.
If using the iPad for college I would also check into insurance options and make sure that always keep the books backed-up on your computer.
As a side note…the iPad requires the use of a personal computer to even start using it. I thought that was a bit funny when I got mine. I thought I could just use it out of the box, but nope… I had to connect to my computer to sync and to iTunes.
Best,
Tammie King
Night Owl Reviews
ok, but how can I publish a highly illustrated book, such as a coffee table book with lots of photos?
hmmm. Right now it looks like they are only doing ePub. ePub is basically great for text based books, but not for heavy graphic layouts. It sucks – I do a monthly magazine in PDF and there is no good way to do it as ePub. So, I think we are stuck until Apple opens the format range.
I’m keeping my fingers crossed that they will open the allowed formats.
Tammie King
Night Owl Reviews
I need Ibook store please
I would love to be able to take my kindle books and move them to Ipad, problem is all these solutions are proprietary.
Just download the free Kindle app and when you sign in, all your Kindle books will be on it. None of the periodicals, such as Reader’s Digest, though. Works like a charm.
How do I submit a self-published book for iBooks?
http://iiiConverter.com is a free online tool that allows you to convert various types of e-books, audio files and short video clips to the native media formats of Apple products: iPod Touch, iPhone and iPad. Output formats are: epub for e-books, m4a for audio and m4v for video.
Thanks for the link and info!
As I use a ebook device, I can quarantee that the use of an iPad as a ebook reader will be limited. Reading an ebook from a computer screen not designed for reading will be difficult due to eye stress. The next generation of trasflective screens (capable of switcing between LCD and eInk mode) will be the solution people need for multipurpose devices.
So I am afraid for what you say will happen, you will have to wait at least until iPad 2.0.
It’s crazy for Apple to make people downgrade page-designed PDFs to the inferior ePub format having produced a piece of kit that is big enough to display PDF ebooks.
I cannot seem to see any other books on the bookstore that are not classics. I am wanting to download some childrens new release. Help
Here in the UAE the books are not accessible.
We can only download the books from Project Gutenberg, which are old and also available with all other e-book readers.
Sofar Stanza is far better than iBooks – the interface, settings, books list – everuthing!
What’s with the Google adds that cover up a portion of your article and has no intuitive way of moving it or closing it? Not good!
We do all types of ePub conversion for Apple iPad’s iBook application.
We at iBooksPublication.com started out as a small firm of 5 people in 2008 from our location in Bangalore, the IT Hub of India. However, our passion about growth, meeting the client’s expectations and succeeding on the deliverable has made us a multi-functional team of 50+ employees in the span of 2 years.
http://www.elance.com/s/ibookspublication/
I doubt the EPUB files downloaded for the iBook reader app will be available to other applications. On the iPhone I’ve not seen this kind of cross application data sharing. This would also create DRM concerns with the sealed unit model Apple have. However the market would be wide open for a TeX capable reader app with its own local data storage and download capabilities.
The iPad is a serious threat to the Kindle, Amazon has clearly noted this. The new Kindle I think, sounds like a better e reader over all. Time will tell!
Ben – Kindle Case
The iPad is a serious threat to the Kindle, Amazon has clearly noted this. The new Kindle I think, sounds like a better e reader over all.
Ben – Kindle Case
This app drains battery life, you can’t choose the orientation, but if you tip it accidentally to one side or the other, it takes forever to correct. You can’t choose a black screen with white words to minimize battery life. However, it does look nice overall, but really all flash and no substance. eh. Apple–FIX IT!
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i have an iphone 4G i want to download ibook
Wldon,
What about buying books from GoggleBooks (Sony Reader) and loading into iPad? All my favorite old, I mean old, books they have it. Will I have to miss it?
Weldon,
What about buying books from GoggleBooks (Sony Reader) and loading into iPad? All my favorite old, I mean old, books they have it. Will I have to miss it?