Archive for the ‘Kindle PC’ Category

Find and Download Free Books for Kindle

Most eBooks available on the Amazon Kindle store are paid, but you can simply find and download free books for reading on your Kindle Reader or your Kindle Desktop application.

#1. Google Books on your Kindle

Google Books has a large collection of public domain books in the standard ePUB format, you also can download preview book using Google book download, it download google book into PDF format that supported in Kindle reader.

#2. Find Free Kindle Books on Amazon.com

Before your proceed, please log-in to your Amazon account, choose “Manage your Kindle” and change the country associated with your Kindle account to “United States”. This is important because most “free” content on the Kindle Bookstore is currently restricted to North America.

Read the rest of this entry »

First, make sure your Kindle’s on and the wireless connection is active.

Press menu and select experimental.

Then select basic Web.

Press menu again and select enter URL.

Then enter www.feedbooks.com/mobile.

Now you can browse through books by title or author. It’s a little tedious using the navstick to move down and select the titles.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Amazon store now has more than 360,000 books that you can download and read on your Kindle e-book reader. While most eBooks available on the Amazon Kindle store are paid, here are some simple ways by which you can find and download free books for reading on your Kindle Reader or your Kindle Desktop application.

Download free book from Google Books

Install Google Book Download

Google Books  are some popular sites that offer a large collection of public domain books in the standard ePUB format.  you can download as PDF book , then import into Kindle Reader for reading . That means you now have millions of out-of-copyright books for your Kindle for free.

The Kindle only allows the reading of Amazon DRM-protected content. So how do you load other eBooks onto the Kindle?  Just convert other ebook to PDF.

Read the rest of this entry »

Kindle for PC

Amazon’s announcement came days after rival bookseller Barnes & Noble said it would start selling its own device, the nook. Due to ship in November, the $259 reader features the same gray-scale E Ink screen as the Kindle, but also has a separate color touch screen. Nook owners also can share their books with their friends for up to 14 days at a time.

The Kindle for PC software will let users read Amazon’s digital books without having to buy the $259 Kindle device.

Most people think of Amazon’s Kindle as a slim piece of hardware the size of a very thin paperback book.

In fact, Kindle is also a piece of software that displays digital books on any device Amazon chooses. Today, the Seattle online retailing giant unveiled a Kindle version for computers. The application was part of Microsoft’s Windows 7 operating system launch event in New York this morning. Expected to be released in November, the program will also run on Microsoft’s earlier operating systems, Windows XP and Windows Vista.

Dubbed Kindle for PC, the free software will let readers view full-color photos and use touch screens to browse books, turn pages and adjust font sizes for digital books purchased at Amazon’s online bookstore. Amazon has released a version of the reader for Apple’s iPhone and iPod Touch devices.

In contrast, the Kindle 2 and the Kindle DX, two devices sold by Amazon, has only the gray-scale screens and don’t allow users to “lend” digital copies of their books to others.

By releasing Kindle for PC, Amazon is expanding the audience for its digital books beyond just readers who can afford to buy its $259 device to about 1 billion of the world’s PC users.