![]() Therefore, in order to turn the page I have to use the mouse - no big deal, but it does not equate to flipping through a magazine. Even so, I have to zoom into see the text clearly - not much, but enough to turn the left and right arrow keys into scroll keys, not page turners. If Cosmopolitan and Men's Health have worked out that a handbag (man-bag?) sized edition is worthwhile for their audience, can't the publishers of digital magazines show some intelligence about the size of the screen they could be catering for? A faithful reproduction of an A4-ish sized magazine is adhering to a constraint that should no longer apply. The biggest problem is that the concept belongs to the last decade. The website says click on "check for new publications" in the application - the application doesn't seem to have such a button. All my old magazines downloaded fine, but the free Nat Geo available for trying the beta is stuck in no-mans land. #4 amjbrown 03-30-2010, 04:23 AMThe Mac version doesn't seem to have any way of poking it to get downloads you are due. Instead, the content scaled to match the browser window, and there was a scroll bar for when there was more text on the page than could fit on a screen. I was expecting something like a PDF viewer, with pages that were simple copies of the print edition. I opened the special issue in the browser based Zinio reader, and I’m pleasantly surprised. ![]() It can’t access the Zinio website to download content, but this will probably be fixed fairly soon. Unfortunately, the app is broken at the moment. You can get that issue here, but you’ll need to set up an account with Zinio first. This new application introduces enhanced features enabling consumers to access their favorite interactive magazines and books worldwide, online or offline, in a more optimized and enjoyable way.The app can be downloaded now, and a special release of the latest issue of National Geographic is available for it as a free download. An extension of Zinio’s pay-once-read-anywhere “UNITY” platform, Zinio Reader 4 is supported on Windows, Mac and Linux operating systems, in its initial beta release. This latest release from Zinio is another addition to its continued focus of offering ubiquitous access across PC, Mac, netbook, touch-screen and tablet devices, including the iPhone, iPod touch and the upcoming iPad from Apple. Zinio Reader 4 was built using Adobe’s AIR framework, optimized to power a cloud-enabled library, specifically tailored for interactive magazine and book content experiences. In combination with Zinio’s latest product launch, National Geographic celebrates World Water Day with a free download offer of its interactive April 2010 “Water” issue, using Zinio Reader 4 and “UNITY” platform.Zinio’s newest digital reading application enables a seamless, online or offline reading experience across the Company’s global offering of over 2,000 top consumer magazines. Zinio, the global leader in digital publishing technology and services, today announced the launch of Zinio Reader 4, built using Adobe AIR.
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