

Yep, that is most definitely not the DRM-free ebook we were promised. Please remove the item from you device and go to archived items to download it again. It showed me the same message that I’ve seen every time I’ve tried and failed to read a DRMed ebook on an unauthorized device:

But the app did give me a clue as to why it couldn’t read the ebook. I then transferred it to the Polaroid Android tablet I’m reviewing right now and it wouldn’t work in that Kindle app, either. I didn’t want to wait, so I downloaded a copy and tried to open it in Kindle for PC. When you do that, Amazon will then push out a copy of the ebook to all the apps and devices registered to your account.īut this might take awhile (it did for me), given how much traffic those ebooks are generating today. First, I’m sure you know that when you buy an ebook from Pottermore, you can transfer it to your Amazon account. So I bought one.Īnd that’s where the troubles began. I know that I complained about the prices, but I started looking at the Kindle Store integration and I got curious about how it worked. Pottermore launched their ebookstore this morning, and I bought an ebook right away. Do you recall the promise made last year that HP ebooks would be available in Epub & Kindle formats, DRM-Free? Yeah, it looks like that didn’t happen.
