- Taylor's 50-year sentence draws mixed reactions in Liberia (+video)
- Southern Great Plains could run out of groundwater in 30 years, study finds
- What would happen if Greece exited the eurozone?
- Progress Watch: In Saudi Arabia, a quiet tide of reform
- Exclusive: Veteran Lebanese fighter trains new generation of jihadis – for Syria
Topic: Electronic Book Readers
Top galleries, list articles, quizzes
-
Mother's Day gifts: 4 great e-readers for Mom
Stumped for a Mother's Day gift this year? Your mom would probably love one of these four e-readers.
-
10 most intriguing tablets of 2012
From the inevitable iPad 3 to the mysterious Google Nexus tablet, here are the 10 tablets to watch in 2012.
-
Technology 2012: Four tech trends to watch
Technological innovations lay at the heart of many of last year's biggest stories -- from citizen-recorded videos that fanned the flames of the Arab Spring to the social-media organized Occupy movement. So what new technologies – and unexpected uses of them – will change social habits and relationships this year? Here are four 2012 technology trends that are sure to play a role:
-
The most expensive items on Amazon
We went through each of Amazon's departments looking for the most expensive item. Here's what we found.
-
10 top book headlines of 2011
10 book stories that captivated us in 2011
All Content
-
Gadget guide: Which electronics are 'in season' and which to avoid
Thinking about some major gadget purchases this summer? It may be the right time to pick up a new TV. An iPhone? It's probably best to wait a bit.
-
Chapter & Verse
FC Barcelona stars help to bring e-books to Africa
Worldreader, a nonprofit literacy organization, is using messages from Barcelona soccer stars to help distribute one million digital books to children living in sub-Saharan Africa.
-
The Simple Dollar
Student loans: Pay them off, or invest elsewhere?
Student loans at currently low interest rates should be paid off as quickly as possible, because there aren't many better investments out there. Student loans are question one in this week's mailbag.
-
Chapter & Verse
Harry Potter comes to Kindle
All the books in the Harry Potter series will arrive in the Kindle lending library – free for Amazon Prime members – on June 19.
-
Chapter & Verse
Target will stop selling Amazon Kindle devices
Is Target now seeing Amazon as an enemy rather than a partner?
-
Horizons
Target waves goodbye to the Amazon Kindle (but Nook can stay)
Target and Kindle are parting ways. What's behind the split?
-
Barnes and Noble stock soars on Microsoft team-up
Barnes and Noble stock went zooming following an infusion of money from Microsoft to create a subsidiary for Barnes & Noble's e-book and college textbook businesses.
-
Chapter & Verse
Microsoft joins forces with Barnes & Noble
The software company announced it will invest $300 million in the bookseller's e-book and college bookstore ventures
-
Microsoft and B&N team up on Nook, textbook business
The two companies are teaming up to create a subsidiary for Barnes & Noble's e-book and college textbook businesses, with Microsoft paying $300 million for a minority stake.
-
Android tablets market is on (Kindle) Fire
Android tablets: Kindle Fire accounted for more than half of all sales by February. But can Amazon's Android tablets take on Apple's iPad?
-
Horizons
More tablet owners know Amazon's vision of Android than Google's
The Kindle Fire, the new Amazon tablet, is responsible for more than half of all Android activations, according to a new study.
-
Amazon stock surges on blowout earnings report
Amazon stock got a boost from the company's huge profits in the first part of the year, led by the runaway success of the Kindle Fire tablet. Amazon stock rose $28.01 in late trading.
-
Mother's Day gifts: 4 great e-readers for Mom
Stumped for a Mother's Day gift this year? Your mom would probably love one of these four e-readers.
-
Chapter & Verse
Digital Rights Managment to be dropped by Tor and other Macmillan sci-fi books
Digital Rights Management software was originally meant to restrict pirating of e-books, but many complain because of the restrictions it places on users.
-
Chapter & Verse
E-readers are most popular in ... Kentucky?
The college town of Lexington, Ky. is the US city in which e-readers are the most popular, according to a new study by The Atlantic.
-
Could an 'iPad mini' stamp out the Kindle Fire?
Rumors of a 7-inch 'iPad mini' continue to flood the Internet. Will Apple CEO Tim Cook succumb to the popularity of smaller, cheaper tablets such as the Kindle Fire, or continue to follow in Steve Jobs' footsteps?
-
Horizons
Apple, five major publishers accused of e-book collusion by DOJ
On Wednesday, the Department of Justice filed a complaint in US District Court against Apple and a group of publishers. Hachette, HarperCollins and Simon & Schuster have agreed to settle. The rest will probably fight on.
-
Chapter & Verse
E-book revolution: We're reading more than ever
A study by the Pew Internet Project finds that consumers who use e-readers are buying more books.
-
Horizons
Three new Kindle Fire tablets are on the way: report
Amazon may be close to releasing a successor – or successors – to its popular Kindle Fire tablet.
-
Chapter & Verse
'Harry Potter' e-books: game-changers for the digital world?
Unlike most e-books, digital versions of the 'Harry Potter' series can be read on any device, which may be a harbinger of practices to come.
-
The Simple Dollar
Student loans are $300,000. Prepay them or save?
Student loans are so high, couple wonders whether to pay them off early or save $5,000 a year for retirement. Question on student loans is No. 6 in this reader mailbag.
-
Chapter & Verse
Kurt Vonnegut: unpublished work released through Kindle
A Vonnegut novella titled 'Basic Training,' about a young man visiting an eccentric relative, is available through Kindle only.
-
Horizons
Mini iPad set for release by end of 2012: report
An iPad with a 7.85-inch screen is allegedly due to arrive here by the end of the year. But is the iPad "Mini" for real?
-
Chapter & Verse
Right pricing e-books: Is the government actually discouraging competition?
Authors Guild President Scott Turow charges in an open letter about e-book pricing: “Our government may be on the verge of killing real competition in order to save the appearance of competition.”
-
Android tablets: little headway against iPad
Android tablets, poised to challenge Apple's iPad a year ago, have largely fallen by the wayside. Here's why Android tablets and other tablet computers have a hard time against the iPad.








Become part of the Monitor community
36K on Facebook | 12K on Twitter | 2,250 on YouTube