Skip to main content

Kindle Sparks Up The iPhone…for Free

Kindle Sparks Up The iPhone...for Free

Last month Amazon.com let the news slip that it was planning to bring its Kindle book platform to mobile phones—and now the company has made good on its promise, with the Kindle for iPhone application now available for free from the iTunes App Store. Kindle for iPhone enables iPhone and iPod touch owners to read Kindle books on their devices, with full support for WhisperSync so bookmarks and reading locations can be synchronized between a Kindle device and an iPhone. Users can also wirelessly transfer Kindle titles to the iPhone and iPod touch, and download Kindle books they’ve already purchased directly from Amazon.

“We are excited to bring the new Kindle application to Apple’s App Store and think customers are going to love how easy and fun it is to read their Kindle books on the iPhone and iPod touch,” said Amazon’s Kindle VP Ian Freed, in a statement. “Kindle for iPhone and iPod touch is a great way for customers to catch up on their current book wherever they are, like in line at the grocery store or between meetings.”

Recommended Videos

Early reports from users indicate Kindle for iPhone displays Kindle titles with strong readability on the iPhone, which could make the iPhone a significant growth market for Amazon’s Kindle titles. Amazon’s own Kindle readers are somewhat large to be taken everywhere—and need a light to read by in the dark, just like a real book. The iPhone, however, is more portable and helpfully backlit. Kindle for iPhone does not currently support magazines, newspapers, and blogs available to owners of Amazon’s Kindle devices.

Kindle for iPhone is available from the iTunes App Store as a free download. Kindle books from Amazon vary by titles, but new releases are often priced at $9.99.

Geoff Duncan
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
OnePlus 13 vs. iPhone 16 Pro: Can the flagship killer take another head?
OnePlus 13 in Midnight Ocean beside iPhone 16 Pro in Natural Titanium.

OnePlus looks like it's hit another one out of the park with this year's OnePlus 13. The enthusiast brand's latest flagship launched in China in late October, and now it's officially landed in North America. As one of the first mainstream phones to be powered by Qualcomm's bleeding-edge Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, it brings significant improvements in the OnePlus 13's performance, battery life, and photographic prowess compared to its predecessor.

This also puts the OnePlus 13 first in line to challenge Apple's 2024 flagship. Last year, the iPhone 16 Pro raised the bar with Apple's A18 Pro chip to power new Apple Intelligence features and turn the smartphone into a gaming powerhouse. There's also a clever new Camera Control and studio-quality cinematography features. Does Qualcomm's latest silicon give the OnePlus 13 enough of an edge, and has the smartphone maker put it to good use? Let's dig in and find out how these two measure up to each other.
OnePlus 13 vs. iPhone 16 Pro: specs

Read more
How to use Visual Intelligence on your iPhone with iOS 18.2
Using Visual Intelligence on an iPhone 16 Pro showing ChatGPT answer.

Though the iPhone 16 series launched in September, it shipped with iOS 18 sans Apple Intelligence. Instead, Apple began rolling out Apple Intelligence features starting with iOS 18.1, and then more AI tools arrived in iOS 18.2, including Visual Intelligence for the iPhone 16.

Read more
Have an old iPhone or iPad? You can no longer use this iCloud feature
An iPhone 6S in gold held against a red pipe.

If you own an older iPhone or iPad, it may be time to consider upgrading. As of December 18, the minimum requirement for using iCloud backups is iOS 9 or later, as support for iOS 8 and earlier versions has ended. This information was initially communicated to Apple users in November.

As noted by MacRumors, while iCloud support for devices running iOS 8 or earlier has ceased, you can still create manual backups on a Mac or Windows PC. If your device is currently on iOS 8, but can upgrade to a newer version, your iCloud backup capabilities will be restored.

Read more