Despite what has effectively been a one-tablet market, FierceWireless' Phil Goldstein writes that research firm Strategy Analytics is reporting that the Android tablet market share grew from 2.3% to 26.9% in 12 months.
And that's before the Kindle Fire hits. The Kindle Fire is of course Android-based. Google just intro'd Android 4.0, called "Ice Cream Sandwich" enticing buyers again with powerful memories of childhood's ideal-food types (which I didn't outgrow). Android 4 bridges the differences between Android smartphones and "Honeycomb," which was designed to optimize use of tablet space.
Andy Rubin, Google's sr. vp for mobile, said this week that there are 6 million tablets running Android but readily concedes that it's dwarfed by Apple's 30 million. The operating system version "Ice Cream Sandwich" will eliminate the need for tablet-specific apps. There's a link at the end of this blog entry to the news story on Steve Jobs' promise to focus on destroying Android for stealing from Apple's work.
Kindle Format 8 ('KF8')
I first heard about the Kindle format enhancements from a tweet by the vigilant Mike Cane leading to his take on it.
Amazon's announcement
Amazon's MOBI format and the ePub format are HTML-based, but Amazon's addition of HTML5-based options will add flexibility and layout control missing from the current Mobi version7 at a time when ePub revision 3 has finally been put in place to make for a more consistent experience on different reading systems. (HTML5 is the base language of ePub3.)
The KF8 format change from Mobi7 is also timed with the release of the Kindle Fire Android tablet.
The types of books that will benefit from KF8 are those that benefit from complex graphic layout -- textbooks, children's books, comics, graphics-oriented books, cookbooks, etc. There'll be over 150 new formatting capabilities, including fixed layouts, nested tables, sidebars, etc.
You can see the List of supported HTML tags and CSS elements, which will be very familiar to HTML programmers and gives an idea of what they'll be able to do in the way of page layout.
Essentially, the HTML5 support includes the following (from Amazon's table):
CSS3 support | Floating elements |
Fixed layouts | Text on background images |
Embedded fonts | Numbered and bulleted lists |
Drop caps | And much more |
Some important points in Amazon's KF8 FAQ
- Embedded fonts are supported, so those of us who couldn't stand the TOPAZ format (preferred by publishers who felt they wanted more control over the Look but who didn't seem to know how ugly those books could be and the software problems they could cause) have reason to be hopeful.
- The Kindle Publisher Tools for KF8 including KindleGen2 and Kindle Previewer 2 will be available soon. Publishers can still submit only what they did before and the conversion (w/o the special features) will be done, but they'll be getting, soon, Guidelines on how to take advantage of the new capabilities.
- The Kindle Fire will be the first Kindle device to support KF8, and in the coming months Amazon will roll out KF8 to their latest generation e-Ink devices as well as their free Kindle reading apps.
- Mobi files: "All currently supported content will continue to work."
- "ALL Kindle books currently available in the Kindle Store will be available on Kindle Fire."
- Publishers won't have to provide two versions of titles, since the upcoming updates to the publishing tools will take care of that. KindleGen2 will convert submitted content "so that it works on all Kindle devices and apps."
Publishers will be able to preview, with Kindle Previewer 2, how their titles will look on the range of Kindle devices and apps.
This would mean that current Kindles would be able to read the books formatted with KF8 but without seeing the enhancements that allow the many new features mentioned.
OTHER NEWS
I'll just give links to these for those interested in the many Kindle-related news stories on the Net over the last two days when I couldn't be here. The shorter links are noted at the end of each for Kindle-edition subscribers.
CNet's Seth Rosenblatt's headline is "Amazon's Silk browser: Now EFF approved. Really!"
Customers can turn off the "cloud acceleration" feature if they have privacy concerns. Most of it is aggregated information and it's more important that the Silk browser get you to secure sites fast (since they have slower processes) than to bring you back to their servers first, etc. But some concerns remain. (Link: cnet.co/silk-eff-ok )
Will Amazon produce a Kindle phone? (Link: cnet.co/amznphonemaybe )
Steve Jobs reveals to biographer Walter Isaacson his strong intent to destroy Android. (Link: tcrn.ch/sjobs-android )
The reactions in comments are interesting. There's a fine line between "inspired by" and "stealing from"... (Two words: Xerox, PARC)
Kindle Touch 3G Kindle Touch WiFi Kindle Basic (UK: KBasic) Kindle Fire Kindle Keybd 3G (UK: Kindle Keybd 3G) K3 Special Offers K3-3G Special Offers DX
Check often: Temporarily-free late-listed non-classics or recently published ones Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources. Top 100 free bestsellers. Liked-books under $1 UK-Only: recently published non-classics, bestsellers, or £5 Max ones Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.
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