Google Play Books is similar to Kindle, but it is on an Android device and has a companion application for iPhone and iPad. One advantage is that you can read 50% of most books at their library for free. You can also search books with Google Book Search, read excerpts from interesting sections, purchase books, and read them all on Play Books. Another choice is Apple's iBooks, Mac, iPhone, iPad dedicated reading application. Although iBooks basically have the same function as Kindle, its organization is a bit better. It includes folders to organize your books and automatically groups the series together to make it easier to find the next content you want to read.
A month ago, Google announced Google's new "discovery" function of Google Play Books. This new introduction option is another reason to publish a book on Google Play. As Android's official blog says, this new feature will give Google Play users the opportunity to discover new books based on recommendations from the world's best selections and profiles. Google's game book is a great bookstore, and this recommended feature is another reason to go there. Since the Google store was opened in 2010, we have grown into Google users on a variety of platforms, including Chrome, Android phones, tablets, and even Google's computers (Chromebooks). Perhaps people do not always read in web browsers, but they read through the electronic reading app.