You possibly read the news that Amazon is launching a "Kindle Apps for Tablet Computers" application, joining Kindle for computer, Kindle for iPhone, Kindle for Mac and of course, kindle for Kindle. Exactly which tablet PCs will be supported isn't clear, but Amazon is not being timid about iPad support, adding "as well as the iPad" after each state of "Tablet Computers."

If I am comfortable to read my Kindle titles each on a Kindle or on an iPad or HP Slate or one of the Android tablets; well now I wish I have real option. I can select the hardware that's precise for me, and carry my digital library along for the ride.
I would still choose no DRM but this as a minimum wish a step in the right direction. perhaps in place of an iPad I want to wait for the larger WePad, or the smaller, cheaper zenPad; both of these run Android and all signs are that Kindle for Android is coming.

The difference between Kindle all over and the iPad Universal E-reader is that with Kindle Everywhere you can still devote in an actual e-ink device to read all your content on.

The point is, our content should not be locked to any single device. For e-books to take off, we want content and hardware to become completely uncoupled. Amazon's Kindle Apps for Tablet Computers is, at least, a step in the precise direction.

Nintendo as they had never seen
Nintendo is trying to strike hard while the competition is increasingly fierce. The timing of this announcement we are surprised and moreover suggest certain fragility. In fact, instead of a surprise at E3 to take advantage of the huge investment that represents a booth at a trade show, Mario's father preferred to formalize its console with one of the most thought communicated to us was seen.

We believe this is not a coincidence that the announcement of the 3DS comes the day after the publication of the study Flurry shows that Apple is, after 1 year and 9 months, 20% of the games market portable consoles in terms of sales, white Sony dropped 20% to 11% and that Nintendo has lost 5% to 70%. Nintendo seems to need to show that its business model remains viable by providing a unique game play. It is certainly a strange attitude from the manufacturer that the way he made the announcement just eclipses the merits of the presentation.