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bner Barnes & Noble has just come out with the free Barnes & Noble eReader app for iPhone. (In fact, the app appears to have hit the app store early; the category for it on Barnes & Noble’s website is not yet live and simply says “Summer 2009”.) I have downloaded and installed it to my iPod Touch for a quick look.

The B&N eReader appears to be a rebranded, slightly crippled version of the plain-vanilla eReader app. It does not seem to have eReader’s ability to download books from public-domain sites such as Feedbooks or Manybooks.

I do not know whether using an “ereader://” link would open the book in the B&N app if plain eReader was not installed on the iPhone as well, but I would tend to doubt it. (I have since been informed that the URI style for opening third-party books in eReader is “bnereader://”. Marvelous. Now anyone who wants to make eReader-style books available for download has to add two extra links to his site instead of just one.)

The app comes with two public domain books (The Last of the Mohicans and Sense and Sensibility) and a Merriam-Webster dictionary installed, and Dracula can be downloaded on-line with the creation of a free B&N account. (The account is created through the B&N website, but the app includes buttons to open Safari to the right pages to create or request password reset for an account.)

Reading books works just like the ordinary eReader, with the same options for font size, line spacing, themes, and so forth.

As I mentioned above, the e-book category on Barnes & Noble is not yet active. However, tapping the “Shop for eBooks” link in the app launches a page with an “eBook of the Week” listed: The House at Sugar Beach by Helene Cooper. List price $25, e-book price $9.99. The e-book is marked “not yet available.”

It would have been nice if Fictionwise could have added Barnes & Noble as another store within its own eReader app instead of coming out with a forked clone, but if the alternative were for B&N to absorb eReader completely and cripple that app instead I know which one I would prefer. Hopefully B&N will continue to keep its own reader separate and not interfere with the running of Fictionwise and plain-vanilla eReader.

(Moved up from last night because this is still pretty hot news. Oh, the limitations of the blog format! – D.R.)

 
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