‘Bookfinder’ connects you to a way to look for books (both free and pay). Another useful feature is that you can also use the notes area as a notebook to create either written or drawn notes that are unassociated to a specific book. Notes can be sorted by creation date or title, filtered by type and location and also searched. ‘Notes’ give you quick access to all your notes. The dictionaries that can be downloaded are English, English-German, English-Spanish, French, English-French, French-English, Spanish-French, French-Spanish, English-Polish and Polish-English. The way it works is if you highlight a word and look it up either via one of the three default web based options (Google, Wikipedia and Wiktionary) or via one of the ten downloadable embedded dictionaries you can also add that word, along with it definition if using an embedded dictionary, to your personal lexicon for later reference. ‘Lexicon’ can be used a couple of different ways and it seems to me it would be most useful for a student or perhaps someone learning a new language. You can also turn on expert mode which hides button titles and get access to tips, help, a way to submit requests and download a user manual.Īcross the top of the library screen are tabs for ‘Library’, ‘Lexicon’, ‘Notes’ and ‘Bookfinder’. ‘Settings’ is where you enter your Adobe ID and also has options for the Library, Reader and Lexicon (under the Lexicon option you can download various dictionaries). ‘Search’ can be used to look for a book in your library when you have a long list to look through. ‘Views’ lets you switch between the library viewing options described above. ‘Filter’ lets you filter the books seen by all books, authors, tags, publishers and formats. ‘Explorer’ offers you a file browser as another way to import books. You’re presented with a list and you can select all or put a checkmark next to each book you want to add to your library screen. ‘Syncronize’ will search your device for compatible ebook formats (ePub & PDF). At the bottom of the screen are menu options for ‘Syncronize’, ‘Explorer’, ‘Filter’, ‘Views’, ‘Search’ and ‘Settings’. The library can be sorted by Title, Author, Rating, Date Added and Date of Last Access. Books can be tagged from detail view or also by tapping and holding on a book to bring up its detailed information. Library view can be customized for viewing with options for a simple list, a detail list or cover thumbnails only in three different sizes (list and detail also show small cover icons), cover thumbnails in all views have a graphic in the corner telling you if it’s an ePub or PDF. Upon launching the app you’re presented with your library. #COOL READER ANDROID PDF FULL#The Android Market, AppsLib and SlideMe also have a full featured 7 day trial version so you can give it a workout before spending any money. #COOL READER ANDROID PDF FULL VERSION#The full version is available from the Android Market, Amazon Appstore, AppsLib and SlideMe for $4.99. Mantano requires Android 2.1 or greater and supports both regular Adobe Adept DRM as well as the password based variation used by Barnes & Noble. While Mantano if fairly new to Android devices the folks behind it have been developing reading software for ePaper devices for a number of years and you can tell that by the refined feel of the Android app. #COOL READER ANDROID PDF PDF#A friend of mine described it as ‘better than Aldiko with much better PDF support’, not a bad recommendation. A new app, called Mantano, has jumped into the fray with both feet and quickly become popular among many users. #COOL READER ANDROID PDF FOR ANDROID#There are a lot of reading apps out there for Android and everybody has their favorite one be it Moon +, Cool Reader, one of the many store apps (Kindle, Nook, etc.) or the well known Aldiko. Ebooks Android / ebook technology / Ebooks 4 Comments
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