Quote:
Originally Posted by ChristopherTD
They all seem to use the ADE Mobile libraries to display them so until someone writes their own ePub engine (iBooks?), they are all going to be a bit flaky.
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Of the three you mentioned, only txtr is using Mobile Adobe Digital Editions and so far it is the only iPhone app using ADE. This means that it is likely to handle all commercial ePubs.
I'm not sure the eReader iPhone app supports ePub, but the related B&N Reader app does. If the iPhone app works like the B&N Desktop Reader, it won't support all ePub styles but it will allow you to change font.