Amazon recently announced that Kindle reader users will soon have the facility to lend Kindle books to family and friends. The actual date is still undefined – but it will happen sometime before the end of this year.
It’s a move which will make it even easier for e-books and e-book readers to be adopted. E-books seem to have been accepted by the public in a relatively short timespan. Kindle books are now outselling traditional hardcovers by a factor of 180 to 100, according to Amazon. Surely it can be no more than a matter of time before e-book sales overtake paperback sales.
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The new Amazon lending scheme will allow Kindle books to be lent for a two week period. The borrower will be able to access the book just as if they had bought it themselves for the duration of the loan. Whilst the book is out on loan, the original purchaser won’t be able to access it. Pretty much the same as lending a “real” book to someone in fact.
Amazon has made a variety of free Kindle apps available which allow Kindle books to be read without the requirement for a Kindle reader. At the moment, there are apps for the Windows PC, the Apple Mac, the iPhone, the iPad, the Blackberry smartphone and any device which runs the Android operating system. It may, at least at first glance, seem a little strange that Amazon has gone to so much effort to make their Kindle reader dispensable in this manner. At the moment, according to Amazon, non-Kindle devices account for 20% of all Kindle book sales. As ever more gadgets running the Android operating system are released, this percentage seems likely to increase.
These free Kindle apps have, up until now, allowed only Kindle books to be read. Amazon will now make both newspapers and magazines available using Kindle apps. Again, the release date is yet to be confirmed – but Amazon has advised that they plan to start with the Apple devices and follow up with the Android devices and then the desktop applications in due course.
These changes may not appear to be all that important. However, the fact that they bring e-books more closely into line with the functionality of printed books, could be an important positive factor for someone making a buying decision. You can now do just about everything with an e-book that you would with a printed book – other than using a dog-ear to mark your place that is. It makes it easier than ever for even the most conservative bibliophile to make the move to electronic books.


