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Amazon Kindle App Headed To Android

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Amazon’s finally announced that they’re bringing a version of their Kindle app to Android devices later this summer. The app allows users to browser Amazon’s online book store to download and read eBooks directly on the device.

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You’ll also be able to sync all of your bookmarks to the cloud so you can pick up where you left off regardless of what device you were reading on. No word yet on if the app will support notes, but we’re expecting Amazon to release more detailed information very soon.

Head over to Amazon.com now to be notified of when the app (which will be free itself) will be available. Will this be replacing your Adiko app whenever you can find it in the market?

Introducing Kindle for Android

Free Android app for reading allows customers to enjoy over 540,000 Kindle books on Android phones; Amazon offers Kindle apps for the iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, Mac, PC, BlackBerry and, soon, Android

SEATTLE, May 18, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) –Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) today announced that Kindle for Android, the free application that lets readers around the world enjoy Kindle books on their Android phones, is coming this summer. Kindle for Android enables customers to discover and read from over 540,000 books in the Kindle Store — the largest selection of the most popular books that people want to read — including New York Times Bestsellers and New Releases from $9.99. Like all Kindle apps, Kindle for Android will include Amazon’s Whispersync technology, which saves and synchronizes a customer’s bookmarks across their Kindle, Kindle DX, iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, PC, Mac, BlackBerry and, soon, Android, so customers always have their reading material with them and never lose their place. Kindle is the most wished for, most gifted and #1 bestselling product on Amazon.com.

“Kindle for Android is the perfect companion application for Kindle and Kindle DX owners, and is also a great way for customers to enjoy over 540,000 books in the Kindle Store even if they don’t yet have a Kindle,” said Jay Marine, director, Amazon Kindle. “We think customers are going to love the convenience and simplicity of having instant access to a massive selection of books from Amazon on their Droid, Nexus, Incredible and many more Android devices.”

Android owners can take advantage of the features that customers love about Kindle and Kindle app experience, including:

Search more than 540,000 books, including 96 of 110 New York Times Bestsellers, plus tens of thousands of the most popular classics for free directly from their Android device. Bestsellers such as “Backlash” by Aaron Allston, “Big Girl” by Danielle Steel, “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” by Rebecca Skloot, and “The Lost Symbol” by Dan Brown, and hundreds of thousands of other popular books are $9.99 or less in the Kindle Store
Browse by genre or author, and take advantage of all the features that customers enjoy in the Kindle Store, including Amazon.com customer reviews, personalized recommendations and editorial reviews
Access their library of previously purchased Kindle books storedon Amazon’s servers for free
Synchronize last page read between their Kindle, Kindle DX, iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, PC, Mac, BlackBerry and, soon, Android
Choose from five different font sizes
Read the beginning of books for free before they decide to buy
Read in portrait or landscape mode, tap on either side of the screen or flick to turn pages
Customers can see a sneak peak and sign up to receive an e-mail when Kindle for Android is available at http://www.amazon.com/kindleforandroid.

Quentyn Kennemer
The "Google Phone" sounded too awesome to pass up, so I bought a G1. The rest is history. And yes, I know my name isn't Wilson.

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5 Comments

  1. I want the Google book store but this is cool though.

  2. Why do I have a feeling that “summer” means mid-September and and not June?

  3. “Why do I have a feeling that “summer” means mid-September and and not June?”

    I agree – slow and steady seems to be the pace!

  4. What I really wonder is why the Nook, an Android device, does not have an Android reader?

  5. I’m not too familiar yet with the pricing regarding Public Domain books on Kindle, so if those are the same price we currently have then yes it probably will replace Aldiko. But if they are attempting to charge for Public Domain then no.

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