Posts Tagged ‘eReaders’
Internet Connected Technology In Generation V Households [CHART]
Kids age 6-12, who are in the process of expanding their social circles outside of their families, are interested in (and often active on) online social media.
Read MoreUS Teens' Time Spent Online By Device [CHART]
A May study of US teens by security firm McAfee, for example, showed that teen internet users reported spending 13.5% of their online time on their smartphone.
Read MoreeBook Analytics
The major new players in e-book publishing—Amazon, Apple and Google—can easily track how far readers are getting in eBooks, how long they spend reading them and which search terms they use to find books.
Read MoreGadget Ownership By Generation [CHART]
via marketingprofs.com growing share of seniors own a cell phone, according to separate research from Pew. Nearly seven in ten (69%) adults ages 65 and older say they have a mobile phone, up from 57% in May 2010. Even among those now age 76 and older, 56% report owning a cell phone of some kind,…
Read MoreMobile Click-Through Rates By Device [CHART]
via emarketer.com The study examined the CTRs earned by eight mobile devices, the largest being the Samsung Galaxy Tab (10.1 inches), and the smallest being the Sony Xperia Mini (2.5 inches). The Kindle Fire, with a middle-of-the-pack, 7-inch screen, had the highest CTR—1.02%. The iPad, with a screen size of 9.7 inches, had a CTR…
Read MoreRealistic Page Thumbing & Flipping For eBooks
The KAIST Institute of Information Technology Convergence has built a prototype for an eBook interface that more realistically mimics the use of real books.
Read MoreAmazon Kindle Fire: The iPad Alternative
45% of low-end committed tablet buyers bought an Amazon Kindle Fire.
Read MoreAmazon Kindle Fire Press Conference
Amazon announces 4 new members of the Kindle family: 3 all-new Kindle e-readers & the Kindle Fire—a new class of Kindle for movies, music, apps, games, reading.
Read MoreHow Amazon's Cloud-Accelerated Silk Browser Works
The web browser on Kindle Fire accelerates the power of the mobile device hardware by using the computing speed and power of the Amazon Web Services Cloud.
Read MoreHow Amazon's Kindle Fire Tablet Can Compete With The iPad
Tunheim’s Director of e-Strategy, David Erickson, discusses how Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet can compete compete not only with the Nook but with Apple’s iPad and Android tablets.
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