Adobe introduces new
e-reader software
By Marcelo Duran
Associate Editor
Adobe
Systems Inc. last month introduced a desktop electronic reader it contends will
make rich Internet applications more accessible to consumers.
The reader, dubbed Digital
Editions, is engineered to allow users to view and organize PDF and XML-based
content on desktop and laptop computer, said Bill McCoy, Adobe’s general manager
of ePublishing Business.
To that end, the software can
handle rich-format authoring apps such as Flash or other multimedia tools as
well as offer content-protection features to prevent unauthorized use of certain
files, he said.

Graphic: Adobe
Adobe Systems Inc. introduced Adobe Digital Editions 1.0, a new app designed for
managing and reading eBooks, digital newspapers and other digital publications.
“It is a very lightweight
download, under 3 megabytes and doesn’t require other technologies like Adobe
Reader or Flash Player,” McCoy said. “It behaves as a full desktop application
and supports reading content online and offline.”
Adobe Digital Editions is
available as a free download and runs on Microsoft Corp. and Apple Inc.
operating systems. Linux platforms and versions in French, German, Japanese,
Korean and Chinese are expected to be available in the second half of 2007.
Open standards
DE is based on the Open
Publications Structure, developed by the International Digital Publishing Forum,
which supports reflowable content.
Incorporating OPS allows DE to
reformat content to match a user’s display, a feature that will become more
important once DE is ported to cell phones and other mobile devices.
Adobe’s release of InDesign
CS3 included tools to allow users to create more dynamic content that could be
exploited in DE, McCoy said.
“Of course, InDesign is quite
capable of authoring rich final form pages in PDF format,” McCoy said. “But we
added a new capability to offer XML content that is more dynamic and reflowable
so that the content can adapt to display size.”
The app includes a library
mode for allowing users to see and organize their publications. Users will be
able to drag and drop files onto various bookshelves.
Bookmark content
Users can also tap into a
robust annotation capability that will enable them to bookmark and highlight
content for later referral.
The annotated material will be
stored separately in an open XML format, which McCoy said will set the stage for
future social networking features.
“Over time we want to make it
possible to share these annotations publicly or privately with a set of
colleagues,” he said.
McCoy said Adobe developed DE
on a fast-track schedule, testing three versions in eight months.
“That’s very rapid pace of
evolution for Adobe, instead of going off and working for a shrink-wrap product
that’s going to take 18 months or two years to develop,” he said.
“Our job is to create the
platform that enables people to do these kinds of (reading) experiences and let
the newspapers figure out what it’s good for,” McCoy said of DE. “We’re just the
musical instrument makers. You guys are the musicians.”
DE’s features will also be
incorporated into the Sony Reader product line, according to an alliance between
the two firms.