So far, so good. The process basically works like a traditional highlighter. Every time I sync the Kindle app with Amazon’s server, my notes and highlights show up on all of my other devices too. I don’t have to lug multiple, heavy books around. I can just carry my ultralight laptop, my svelte iPad, or my pocket-size iPod Touch and have access to my reading and the accompanying highlights / notes.
As Will noted in his post, the beauty of all of this, however, is that Amazon also makes available a web site where you can see all of your Kindle notes and highlights. I can even see an aggregation of others’ highlights if I wish (which is pretty cool).
Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url
3More
2More
20 iPad Apps To Teach Elementary Reading | TeachThought - 22 views
1More
5 Things to Do Before You Upgrade to iOS 6 | Next Mobile Phones - 1 views
1More
7 Excellent Tools to Publish Students Work - 21 views
1More
20 iPad Apps for Educators - Resources - SML - 12 views
1More
iPads at Burley: Using Edmodo in Writer's Workshop - 5 views
1More
iPad Creative - iPad Creative Blog - One possible future for multi-touch tech... - 4 views
2More
Digital document annotation on iPad, iPod Touch, or laptop | Dangerously Irrelevant - 13 views
1More
iPresentee | Keynote Themes for iPad | - 15 views
1More
Apps in Education: Apps for Handwritten Notes - 10 views
« First
‹ Previous
81 - 100 of 491
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page