E-Book Prices Across Formats
There were also other e-book price comparison sites, but I do not think the others were built in 48 hours. A team of four developers leather-bound from the outset as part of this weekend Rails Rumble competition built. It is designed to help users iOS app (or anyone else-platform when it comes to e-books) at prices around formats in no time. “No more searching the Kindle, Nook, iBook, and the desired eBook stores for the price you see,” promises the site. “One search with leather band.”
There are a handful of enthusiasts who have multiple e-Reader, but leather is particularly useful for readers who use the e-book stores applications for desktops, tablets and smartphones – and thus to compare a greater ability and incentive. The inclusion of Apple’s iBooks suggests that iPad Web site and iPhone users is not level, is not iBooks for each platform next iOS available as well as Samsung BD-C7900.
Leather-bound has a simple but well animated interface. If you (either author or title works just as well) enter a search term, you will first three games for the book to download with an option for more results. Choose a book, and the site brings the price of the Kindle, Nook and stored iBooks. The book invites results as it finds it, that is, it will show you a Kindle price, even if it has not yet been found in the book nook or iBooks. (If you find the page can not results, “search” wheel just never stops spinning.) Then there is a button to your search results Tweet – advertise an easy way for readers find or authors or publishers, readers know to let the availability of the three major e-book stores, at least for IOS users. (Sony, Kobo and a few other e-book stores are left in the cold.)
Rails Rumble “is a kickass 48 hours web application development competition,” said the official site, where participants “to design a caffeinated weekend, develop and deploy the best web property that you can.” The competition has become popular among developers with the open-source web application framework Ruby on Rails.
According to the website of the otherwise self-satirizing “About” page, the four developers – Nathan Carnes, also known as “The Hand of God,” says Andrew Dumont (“The Suit”), Adrian Pike (“The Brain”) and Amiel Martin (“juggling Lord”) met while working as a developer for the group text-messaging company Tatango. When searching in leather, be warned: like any new storefront, it’s a bit crowded on its first day. An unexpected flood of visitors from tech sites (including this one) have quickly built the service is slow.
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