The Financial Times and ESPN have each built new mobile apps in HTML5, CNN reports.Īpple recently told Amazon and others that they couldn’t link to their own stores from their iOS apps, TechCrunch reports.Īpple's goal is to steer more of the revenue for content purchases through its own in-app payment system, which typically nets Apple a 30 percent cut of the sales.
Bookmarks, notes and highlights are also stored and the reader automatically syncs to a user's personal Kindle library and last page read. The reader allows users to read books from the cloud or download for offline reading, using HTML 5 (or a Chrome browser extension). The application - a web-based version of the Kindle eBook reader app - is available online now for the Safari browser on the iPad or a desktop and on the Chrome browser, and will be available for Internet Explorer, Firefox, the BlackBerry PlayBook browsers and others in coming months, Amazon said in a statement, reported by Computerworld.Īmazon didn't name Apple in its press release, but it did take pains to specifically point out one of the Kindle Cloud's features: 'Without even leaving the app, customers can start shopping in the Kindle Store.' Amazon on Wednesday launched the Kindle Cloud Reader, a Web-based app that lets eBook readers access their digital Kindle books using only a browser - online or offline - thus sidestepping Apple's strict new in-app purchasing rules for the App Store.