• braxy29@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      this is also why i started buying physical books and using my local public library again.

      • Paranoid Factoid@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        My local library allows borrowing ebooks. It’s incredibly useful. I own two kindles and haven’t spent a dime at Amazon for ebooks. I do buy physical books now and then from there, but only if I really need it and can’t find elsewhere.

          • Paranoid Factoid@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            It expires after two weeks. You can extend, just like borrowing a physical copy. Or return early, in which case it expires upon return.

            • Dasus@lemmy.world
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              3 days ago

              I mean, yeah, sure, I guess that’s a decent solutions in terms of modern IP shit.

              But like, we all know you’re not returning anything and if you wanted, you could also copy it for yourself.

              I just dislike how it feels like when it was actually books, they had actual reasons to everything. There’s a queue because there’s limited copies. You need to return it and if you’re late there’s a fee, because it’s from other people’s time, etc. Nowadays that all feels like larping just to protect large companies IP’s essentially. Because digital copies don’t actually get returned.

              Like when I was a kid I would’ve never thought a librarian would say “you’re not allowed to read that anymore”. Or that I couldn’t copy a thing down at home from one of their books. But now as your tokens to ebooks expire, it kinda does feel like that.

              • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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                2 days ago

                My best friend is a librarian, and they’ve stopped buying ebook licenses because the terms were awful.

                The publishers only allowed an ebook to be checked out a few times before the library had to purchase a license extension. The argument was that pylhysical books face wear and tear and eventually have to be replaced, so ebooks should have to be replaced too.

                • phx@lemmy.world
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                  2 days ago

                  It’s true that normal books do experience wear and tear, but looking at what my local library has I’d say that many or most can still least many years before needing to be retired or replaced.

                  As we’re seeing with Amazon, with ebooks it’s really the readers that expire over time

                • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                  2 days ago

                  I’m not saying they’re not, or that the librarians are any more capitalist than they were in the 90’s. I’m just saying it feels like they are.

      • inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Nothing special. I just run a instance of jellyfin and have a my book collection shared that way.

        I’m sure not the most efficient but it works.

  • MidsizedSedan@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I got 3 kindles off eBay for the price of 1 new. 2 successfully jail broken (and 1 ready to be jail broken. Just on the fence of making another account, or gamble my main one again)

  • flynnguy@programming.dev
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    3 days ago

    I have a kindle that I’ve had for ages. It has been jailbroken for a while and I’ve been loading my own epubs onto it. They make it easy with the 1 click send to kindle stuff but that locks you in to their ecosystem.

  • Olgratin_Magmatoe@slrpnk.net
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    3 days ago

    I’ve been using raw text files for my books, sent locally over USB, and that’s the way it’s gonna stay until my reader craps out

    • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      can’t you just load epub with calibre or another sync to? I’m pretty sure that’s what I do because that’s what I’m doing

      • bobo@lemmy.ml
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        3 days ago

        IMO for personal use “drag and drop into the correct directory” is an infinitely better organisational system than tag based libraries, especially for pirated books. I’m not going to sync my books across 10 different devices since I don’t need more than 1 reader, so it doesn’t make any sense for me to waste time using tags, let alone fix them for every book I download.

      • Olgratin_Magmatoe@slrpnk.net
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        3 days ago

        I’ve tried that in the past, but it doesn’t seem to care how the epub is put on it, it always displays epubs horribly

        • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 days ago

          are you doing something to convert to epub from another format? i don’t have the issue you’re describing when loading epub directly or when converting from mobi with calibre. the format is dynamic unlike PDF, so the font size and page width shouldn’t be fixed like that. it should look and behave pretty much like kindle mobi or your text files

    • flubba86@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      There’s not really any advantage of using txt files over open standard drm-free epubs. You can still generate them yourself using txt editors or publishing software, you can still load them over USB. But epubs give you quality of life features on eReaders like title pages, table of contents, chapter headers, formatting markers like bold and italics.

    • fonix232@fedia.io
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      4 days ago

      It’s a pity Calibre to date refuses to be refactored into a self-hosted service.

      The core logic should be portable, with the app just being an interface to it, but no, the entire project is so much spaghetti it would feed the entire boot for over a year… such a shame.

      • Fmstrat@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        I switched. Kavita is the new hotness.

        I found it for comics, but realized it handled books as well as Caliber does, in a modern interface with OPDS support.

        • fonix232@fedia.io
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          3 days ago

          I tried Kavita and immediately recoiled at the fact that basic features like progress sync or metadata matching are behind a paywall - literally features that don’t cost the developers anything, while having open, active bug reports going back a year on these “premium” features.

          All while licensing the code under GPLv3…

          • Fmstrat@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            Progress sync works fine for me in KOReader with OPDS. Progress Sync Scrobble (to third-parties) is the Kavita+ feature.

            My understanding was the Kavita+ items are things to do with third-party services and meta data providers that are an API/cost-based service to the dev. That being said I don’t use any of those features.

        • BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          I’ve looked into Kavita before and it looks good, just need to figure out a way I can wirelessly connect to it using KOreader on my Kindle to transfer books and sync reading progress

          • Fmstrat@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            The OPDS service works for me, just like on Calibre. I can browse my books from within KOReader.

            • BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              I see, that’s good to hear, since KOreader has a direct integration with Calibre, when I connect it to my server it shows up as a external device in Calibre and I can select multiple books in Calibre and directly send to the Kindle in one click which I find more convenient than navigating a OPDS catalog from within my slow kindle and downloading books one by one, but maybe in the future when I get a better e-reader I will give Kavita a try.

              • Fmstrat@lemmy.world
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                2 days ago

                My workflow is usually to add a book to my Want to Read list in Kavita, then on a reader I can go to that list through OPDS and browse just that list. Makes things much more managable assuming I don’t spam the list.

      • Brewchin@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        Agree, though calibre-web exists and runs in a single Docker container. I’ve been using it for a few years, and it’s great.

        Sure its a whole Linux server under the hood just to run Calibre and the services required to give it a web interface and API for reading apps - making it way bigger than it needs to be - but it does the job.

        • ohulancutash@feddit.uk
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          4 days ago

          Calibre-web isn’t Calibre. It uses the same database, but that’s about it, unless you use the optional conversion mod on the linuxserver container.

        • fonix232@fedia.io
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          4 days ago

          A docker container is preferred, but again, CW isn’t Calibre. Same database but completely different management system + also lacking a lot of the sync opportunities.

          The issue is that there’s no open protocol for library syncing. It doesn’t exist because all big players (Amazon, Kobo/Rakuten, B&N, etc.) have their own proprietary system, and need no open alternatives.

          OPDS is a thing but it’s meant to replicate a physical library (one you can walk into) in behaviour and approach, not a personal library (list all books I have and give me easy access to them). It’s essentially just an RSS-style feed that has no defined structure, thus isn’t software navigable - e.g. there’s no guarantee you can list all book series, or all authors, and most implementations usually give you very roughly defined “recently added”, or “hot now” book lists…

          I’ve actually been working on a solution for this, something that provides an almost Kindle library experience (see all your books from a remote server, sync down the remote ebook file, sync back read progress, filter/search based on book properties, etc.), while being flexible enough for non-readers applications as well. But I haven’t even gotten to the point where I can define the API contract properly, let alone the backing database and mapping to Calibre. Honestly at this stage I feel like the best approach is starting from scratch, establishing modern requirements, and going from there.

        • ftbd@feddit.org
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          4 days ago

          A docker container is not a whole separate Linux server, it uses the kernel running on the host

          • notfromhere@lemmy.ml
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            4 days ago

            With default runtime, very true. There are other runtimes that can be used that provide better isolation like gVisor, kata, firecracker, etc.

  • jackiechan00@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    Jailbreaking and never turning airplane mode off has been the best decision I made with my kindle. Download from zlibrary, transfer to folder on kindle, done

  • RiQuY@lemmy.zip
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    4 days ago

    So the product lineup is now called “Kindle Paperweight” instead?

  • kinther@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Good thing I put mine in airplane mode when I first got it and never updated firmware. I load books like its a flash drive.

  • tomjuggler@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Does anyone else just read on their phone? I use Librera ebook reader in dark mode. The app even reads to me with tts while I’m driving.

    Haven’t picked up a paper book in over 10 years!

    • fonix232@fedia.io
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      4 days ago

      Here’s a reminder that Boox makes amazingly good e-readers in all form factors Amazon does (including a variety of tablets!), with stylus support (USI 2.0 for smaller devices, EMR for their Note series and above), fully open (recent Android versions, regular updates, unlockable bootloader, straightforward to root devices), support KOReader, with a solid built in reader (plus support for cloud sync, including syncing books to a free 10GB Boox server storage), support for OPDS (a better way to access your library than Calibre’s sync, plus it can be utilised with most digital libraries too), and altogether quite well priced devices.

      At the moment I have on my hands a Go Color 7 gen2, a Note Air5 C, and a Palma2 Pro. The experience is surprisingly good for a “random Chinese brand”, the hardware, compared to similarly priced devices, is superior (seriously, 4/6/8GB RAM, 64/128GB internal storage, SD card support), not to mention their customised e-ink waveforms (which give you near LCD-like scrolling with minimal trailing effect and little to no ghosting, something I can’t say about my Kindles…)

      The only downside I found of these devices is the relatively bad battery life in locked/standby (due to Android, but you still easily get over a week per charge with average use, or about 20-22 hours of active use!), and the speakers… definitely not meant for audiobooks.

      • ChristerMLB@piefed.social
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        4 days ago

        Being Norwegian it is my patriotic duty to shill for ReMarkable, it’s pretty good at being what it is.

        It’s expensive, though.

        • BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          It’s more for note taking, annotation and drawing than purely reading ebooks though, the form factor alone would make it uncomfortable for long reading sessions I think

          • ChristerMLB@piefed.social
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            2 days ago

            It hasn’t really been a problem for me, but I like having a big display, especially for pdfs or comics. It’s also been great for character sheets for roleplaying games - especially since they get synced to the cloud, so I can always pull them out on my phone if I forget the tablet.

            The interface, marketing and development all seem to be very focused on note taking and sketching, though. I’ve used it for drawing, but the exported files are kind of crap - IMO, the best way of exporting a drawing from ReMarkable is to lay the thing on a scanner. If you want high resolution, you zoom in on your drawing and scan it in pieces.

        • fonix232@fedia.io
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          4 days ago

          Sorry but no. Abysmal hardware, shitty software that’s locked down AND crap when opened up, and horrid QA. Talking from experience.

          • ChristerMLB@piefed.social
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            4 days ago

            it is definitely too closed down, haven’t had those other experiences though, I’ve had my ReMarkable 2 for quite a few years now. Then again, I haven’t tried hacking at it

            • fonix232@fedia.io
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              3 days ago

              The hardware weakness is super obvious if you try to add any third party apps. Slow loading times, badly exposed pen API, among other things.