![]() What's cool about it? An interesting feature, especially for tablet owners: You can download a number of your books to your local device. ![]() You can page back and forth by either clicking on arrows on either side of the text, or using your PgUp/PgDn keys. An icon toggles a bookmark on and off for the page you're currently reading another offers a list of your bookmarked pages, and the pages that you marked and/or highlighted in your Kindle. You can also change various aspects of the page: font size, margins and color mode. On the actually reading interface, the dark banner includes a button that takes you back to your library a back button that returns you to your last location and a button that will take you to various parts of the book, such as the cover, table of contents, or a specific location (using Amazon's rather impenetrable method of figuring location for example, my copy of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes asked me to enter a location from 1 to 4672). ![]() On the Library page, the icons allows you to manage your account (mostly, offering access to a help file and to various legal documents), sync your account and go to the Kindle Store to buy more books. (Dark top banners seem to be in fashion these days Google recently introduced one for its Google+ social network and other applications). Most of the controls for both the Library and reading pages, however, are located on a dark banner that stretches across the top of the window. A sliding control on the upper right lets you control the size of the images and type. On the front Library page, you can view a list of your books in either a list or grid view you can order them by which you've recently read, by author or by title. The interface is clean and works well with the standard Chrome interface. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |