To clarify, Kindle can’t read epub, but Pottermore will send your purchased book(s) through your Amazon account so you can access a Kindle version of the book in your Kindle Library (cloud) and read it on your Kindle or with a Kindle app. You can similarly link your Barnes & Noble or Sony or Google Play accounts and download the books to your devices directly from those accounts. Or you can download the epub (which has no DRM, only a watermark) and sideload it directly on any device that reads epub.
So the Pottermore site will basically tell Amazon that you’ve bought the books, and Amazon will give you a Kindle version identical to the Kindle version you would get if you bought them directly from Amazon? (You can also buy the books from Amazon)
These different formats for eBooks are a pain. Why can’t everyone use the same format? :mad:
When you “buy” from Amazon, they actually send you to the Pottermore site for your purchase.
If only. At least Pottermore’s approach does bridge the gap between the various formats. Their direct download epub is DRM free so it will work on all the platforms that use incompatible versions of DRM for epub (Apple, Sony, B&N, Kobo) and they also have Amazon delivering the mobi version.
That’s great that JK Rowling decided to release the books DRM free, and I know she’s not hurting for money, but this also means that tons of people will be getting it for free from their friends or from torrents. I plan on buying them later tonight, and wonder if there will be anything in the book that indicates that I’m the one that bought it.
Yes, according to the explanation the website gave me when I purchased them earlier this evening - the watermark has information about the purchaser in order to allow them to monitor copyright infringement.
There is also a limit to how many times you can download it from Pottermore, which I assume means how many times / how many different devices you can load it on from your Amazon or Nook or whatever account you link it to, if you choose to do that.
Yeah, I just noticed that myself! Maybe if go to amazon.co.uk …
(after checking)
Nope, I don’t see the e-Books there. On the other hand, searching for Rowling at amazon.co.uk brings up some pornographic books by some other female Rowling. :eek:
There are probably plenty of news sites and blogs that discuss all the details; I found a couple pretty good explanations at Booksprung and Books on the Knob.
Yeah, I noticed that, from here in the US, you can see the UK versions, but you can’t purchase them. I wonder why the restriction.