Your Kindle Paperwhite can't read every file that's on your computer. A file has to be in a Kindle-compatible format so that the device can display it. There are options for converting files, but the following files should not need any conversion to be readable on your Paperwhite. The following list describes the Kindle-friendly file types:

Just found my mom's old Kindle and I was wondering if there's any way to load epub files from the computer to the Kindle? I have a few from some humble bundles I bought and I want somewhere to read them


Can I Download Pdf Files To My Kindle Paperwhite


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On your Mac, using each cable one at a time, what do the Apple menu > About This Mac > System Report > Hardware > USB details say? Does the paperwhite cable show a kindle device and the other two a different device?

Interesting I have 2 kindles. a paperweight and a voyage. The older paperweight allows me to download books from iMac via calibre on it. The newer paperweight (voyage) - no joy with the same cable! I have tried multiple times. Works with one so not the other. So the cable works differently across different kindles.

Existing MOBI and AZW files in a Kindle Library are converted to the KF8 (.azw3) format, but adding new MOBI and AZW ebooks is no longer supported by Send to Kindle. Whereas EPUB files can now be added to a Kindle Library, and like pre-existing MOBI and AZW files, they are automatically converted to KF8 files.

I also included three pdf files which function as an overall index which also originate from spurgeongems.org. All you have to do is plug your kindle paperwhite into your usb slot on your computer and drag-drop these files over.

Kindle File Format is a proprietary e-book file format created by Amazon.com that can be downloaded and read on devices like smartphones, tablets, computers, or e-readers that have Amazon's Kindle app. E-book files in the Kindle File Format originally had the filename extension .azw; version 8 (KF8) introduced HTML5 & CSS3 features and have the .azw3 extension, and version 10 introduced a new typesetting and layout engine featuring hyphens, kerning, & ligatures and have the .kfx extension.

Kindle devices and apps are designed to use Amazon's e-book formats: AZW that is based on Mobipocket; in fourth generation and later Kindles, AZW3, also called KF8; and in seventh generation and later Kindles, KFX.[1] When uploaded via the Send to Kindle service Kindles now support the EPUB file format used by many other e-book readers. Similar to EPUB, Amazon's file formats are intended for reflowable, richly formatted e-book content and support DRM restrictions, but unlike EPUB, they are proprietary formats. AZW files debuted with the first Amazon Kindle in 2007.

Software such as the free and open source Calibre, Amazon's KindleGen,[2][3] and the email based Send-to-Kindle service are available to convert e-books into supported Kindle file formats. Kindle devices can also display some generic document formats such as plain text (TXT) and Portable Document Format (PDF) files; however, reflowing is not supported for these file types.

I had the same problem. I was using just a random USB cable and found my Mac wouldn't recognize the kindle. When I dug out the USB cable that shipped with the Kindle, everything worked fine. So, evidently, not all micro-USB cables are the same...

Gather your Kindle, a kindle cord, download Calibre, and the plugin. Hook up the Kindle to the computer, open Calibre, and install the plugin according to instructions here. Once you have installed the plugin, you will need to restart Calibre. You must have your Kindle connected to your computer to operate the plugin.

Many Kindle users are searching for solutions to read epub on Kindle Paperwhite, because Kindle device doesn't support EPUB natively. Fortunately we've found solutions to reading epub on kindle Paperwhite.

--Most of the epub books, such as the books purchased Google Play Books, Kobo, Nook, are protected with DRM protection, which prevent us reading epub files on non-supported readers, such as Kindle paperwhite.

To read ePub on Kindle Paperwhite, the best and simplest way is ebook format conversion. As we all know that Kindle only reads kindle format such as Mobi/AZW3, so how about converting epub to kindle format?

As an ebook fan, you must have heard of Calibre. This is a free ebook management tool, which helps you convert ebooks from one format to another. So you can use it to convert your epub files to Kindle format.

Just download the software to your computer. Then add epub books to the software. Both DRM-free and DRM-protected epub books are supported perfectly. Then select kindle Mobi or AZW3 as the the target output format, click on "Convert to Mobi" button.

3. After you converted your epub books to kindle format, transfer the converted files to Kindle. Then you can read your epub on Kindle. Follow this complete guide on how to send epub to Kindle.

Hi I have converted books to MOBI on my PC, and then saved them in the library of my Kindle for PC App, but how do I actually get these books onto a kindle device? They don't appear in any other Kindle library, despite repeated attempts at syncing.

What FireOS version are you running? AFAIK it is possible to install the Google Play Store on a Kindle Fire HD, in which case you can just install it from the Store.

Or you can also sideload .apk files, which can be found here Joplin

Once you have the setting enabled that allows you to install non-play store apps, you can think of installing .apk files as no different from how you installed Joplin on Windows - think of it like Android's version of an installer .exe file.

It does not appear to be a usb power issue, since the Kindle Fire wakes up from sleeping when it is plugged in. I never get the message on the Kindle telling me it is ready to accept files from the computer, though.

The approach I would take would be to mount the Kindle and then you can cp files over in the terminal or likely even the file browser. I'd start with dmesg as you've done and note which device node the Kindle is put on. Look for lines in dmesg like;

I know its kind of old question but I had the same problem and I did what Jeremiah said @Jeff.

The only difference was that I didnt put ext3 and make sure I created a directory for kindle on /mnt by using sudo mkdir /mnt/kindle. I hope I helped a little.

One last way to add an ebook file to your Kindle device is through a mobile device. For example, if an ebook is emailed to you, or you use a service like BookFunnel or StoryOrigin to deliver these files to your phone, you might want to use this method.

PRC is a generic format, calibre supports PRC files with TextRead and MOBIBook headers.PDB is also a generic format. calibre supports eReader, Plucker (input only), PML and zTxt PDB files.DJVU support is only for converting DJVU files that contain embedded text. These are typically generated by OCR software.MOBI books can be of two types Mobi6 and KF8. calibre fully supports both. MOBI files often have .azw or .azw3 file extensions.DOCX files from Microsoft Word 2007 and newer are supported.

In order to convert a collection of HTML files in a specific order, you have tocreate a table of contents file. That is, another HTML file that contains linksto all the other files in the desired order. Such a file looks like:

If you are sending to your Kindle, remember to update the email preferenceson your Amazon Kindle page to allow email sent from your GMX emailaddress. Also note that Amazon does not allow email delivery of AZW3 andnew style (KF8) MOBI files. Finally, Amazon recently started sendingconfirmation emails that you have to click on back to your GMX accountbefore the book is actually delivered.

Books sent to the Kindle only show up on the Kindle after they have beenindexed by the Kindle. This can take some time. If the book still does notshow up after some time, then it is likely that the Kindle indexer crashed.Sometimes a particular book can cause the indexer to crash. Unfortunately, Amazon hasnot provided any way to deduce which book is causing a crash on the Kindle.Your only recourse is to either reset the Kindle, or delete all files from itsmemory using Windows Explorer (or whatever file manager you use) and then sendthe books to it again, one by one, until you discover the problem book. Onceyou have found the problem book, delete it off the Kindle and do a MOBI to MOBIor MOBI to AZW3 conversion in calibre and then send it back. This will mostlikely take care of the problem.

When you first run calibre, it will ask you for a folder in which to store your books. Whenever you add a book to calibre, it will copy the book into that folder. Books in the folder are nicely arranged into sub-folders by Author and Title. Note that the contents of this folder are automatically managed by calibre, do not add any files/folders manually to this folder, as they may be automatically deleted. If you want to add a file associated to a particular book, use the top right area of Edit metadata dialog to do so. Then, calibre will automatically put that file into the correct folder and move it around when the title/author changes.

To those of you that claim that you need access to the filesystem, so that you can have access to your books over the network, calibre has an excellent Content server that gives you access to your calibre library over the net.

If you are worried that someday calibre will cease to be developed, leaving all your books marooned in its folder structure, explore the powerful Save to disk feature in calibre that lets you export all your files into a folder structure of arbitrary complexity based on their metadata. 2351a5e196

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