While using Publisher to format the printed version, I needed to tweak the text so it fitted the physical space available on particular pages. That's one reason why the text in Publisher is different to its original sources. But as far as I can see, the only way to extract text from Publisher at present is via copy / paste?

Producing well-formatted eBooks is rather like the problem of producing webpages when all web browsers were different and worked to different standards: With the ePub output from PagePlus, I have used a code editor to inspect the output coding, line by line, in order to understand & overcome problems: A badly encoded eBook may well work OK with some eReaders & eReading software, but fail badly with others.


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Perhaps partly because I'm writing about the history of a site spanning a couple of thousand years, I expect to reuse my old material in new projects, and to publish it in different ways: eg. Print, eBooks, audio files, websites, etc. etc. Much of the material for this current booklet, including the main diagram, is from the 1980s; extended and updated where necessary.

BTW. My initial attempts to copy / paste from Publisher did not go well: The pasted text had no spaces between paragraphs, so was hard to read. I also discovered that different parts of my booklet had slightly different paragraph styles, but that unlike in PagePlus, Publisher does not seem to provide an easy way to select all paragraphs which use a particular style so that they can all be changed to the correct style.

Thanks, but I thought that car advert had always to be glossy...? When I was looking for a car, many manufacturers offered their brochures as downloadable PDF files. But these were very frustrating to read: They were the PDF as sent to the printing company, sometimes even including crop marks etc. So were not designed for easy reading on a screen: I had to keep zooming in in order to read text, then scroll / pan looking for the next page. Many government leaflets suffer from the same problem: The downloadable PDF is designed for sending to the printer; not for easy reading on screen.

It was a fine decision to avoid using a PDF and Calibre. If the process is improved today, and need less work than in the past, it's the same as opening a PDF in APub: no informations about styles, text "au kilomtre" (flowing endlessly or by pages, meaning page numbers and chapter headers can be in you main text, etc.). In the end, it's a lot of cleaning and re-formatting: too much work when we had cleaner text from the beginning.

I needed to publish this project as a printed booklet, as a Kindle eBook, and on webpages: I value flexible import & export options from programs, to avoid the need for recreating text. Also, some of my text and images were originally created decades ago using long lost tools: I value programs which can export material in "industry standard" formats so that the material can be imported into other or newer programs.

Thanks for authors like you. I'm testing ways to avoid Amazon since the authors gain more selling from their site, Patreon or other means. My choice depends of the difference between the selling price on Amazon and the other options (I can accept a difference of few euros or double price, but I can't see the logic of thrice or more the price).

For Apple users like me, Pages has ePub conversion. I used it before for a 250 page book and it worked fine for Kindle, Apple, Google, etc. I have had a book that sells among the top for its genre for several years using this ePub. The only glitch is that Pages has only a TOC, but not an index function. I built the index from scratch with bookmarks. I'm considering Affinity for the PDF version for print functions, (TOC, index, and bleed), since Apple Pages doesn't have index or bleed, only TOC. So for the price of Affinity, this all sounds good, but then for ePub, I may copy the book back into Apple Pages for the Epub. I don't know what'll happen to the index. Perhaps some of the formatting will hold and I won't have to build the index in ePub from scratch. I use InDesign for covers, but haven't tried it for the book interior, and Affinity looks less complicated than InDesign, so I may give that a try. For $50, it's worth a try.

Just a tip for you, LibreOffice can export directly to epub. If the output from the default export filter doesn't suit you, you can install the writer2html extension. You'll still need to tweak the css for some styles, but its output is rather clean

Kindle ereaders need a Wi-Fi connection to download library Kindle Books from Amazon. If you're using a Kindle ereader and you don't have a Wi-Fi connection, you'll need to transfer the title via USB.

In addition to Kindle formatted e-books, you can read EPUB e-books and listen to MP3 audiobooks on most recent Kindle Fire devices by downloading the Libby app from the Amazon Appstore. You can also install the cloudLibrary app on your Kindle Fire, which gives you access to an additional collection of library e-books to borrow. This app is not available through the Amazon Appstore. Visit cloudLibrary for complete instructions on installing and setting up the app.

I recently set up my Kindle to receive books by email. The only verified address is my personal email. In Calibre, I set up the send-by-email feature by providing my Kindle's "email address" ([email protected]) and I filled in the "from email ID" field (my personal email). I did not provide any optional server or my email password. I am not logged in to my email on any email client on my Desktop.

Hard to say without knowing which system (Hotmail or Gmail?) you're using, butbest guess if you truly didn't fill these in, then it may be grabbing MSN/Outlook/Hotmail settings from your Windows credentials, although I would still expect you to have to sign in at some point. In Windows 10, programs can query the current logged-in user, and their (public key equivalent) credentials. Other apps like the outlook mail server can then "trust" things sent by these credentials (as long as they've been logged into within a period of time), without further authentication.

I JUST got this to work. After i downloaded Kindle for IPhone, i went into iTunes on my PC, select 'File' -> 'Add file to library' -> select Kindle from the PC desktop. A few minutes later, my books from the Kindle for PC showed up in the ARCHIVE list at the the kindle for iPhone. I went into that list and downloaded them into my main kindle list. Hope this will work for you as well.

I don't think it is going to work , I have a kindle and I too use Calibre to manage some of the content in my Kindle . Calibre detects the kindle(or any other ebook reader) when you connect and can automatically sync with it .

When you connect you phone the calibre doesnot detect your phone as an ebook reader so it wont transfer the books to your phone .

What you need to do is ,locate where on your hard drive(you can check this from the calibre's settings) , the books are stored and then manually transfer them to your phone.

The good news is that we can always ask OverDrive to request the Kindle file from Amazon. This often works, but not always. If you run across a title not available in Kindle format, let us know, and we'll pass the request on to OverDrive.

Basically, you renew the title in your app or on the OverDrive website, then remove the title from your Amazon account, then re-download it. For more detailed instructions, "How to renew Kindle books from your library" on OverDrive's help site.

So my guess is that you could buy a Kindle from the US and, in the UK, buy US books from the US Kindle store, charged to your US account. You would ideally want just the wifi Kindle, since the 3G will work in the UK but you will be hit with bandwidth charges for the downloads (I believe). In essence you would be operating as a US Kindle owner on a very long vacation in the UK.

So, yes, go ahead and ask you MIL to bring you a cheap US Kindle. The only difference seems to be the number of prongs on the recharge-from-mains dongle, and a standard US-to-UK plug adaptor will fix that anyway.

i think the fact that are kindles are not compatiable with any other country not really too amazing as all their gadgets neer eer been compatiable with us brits but sure you all must have kindles of your own if not tough i love mine its my favorite along with my i pods and phones and the kindle is the king to me no more wrestling with heavy books and storing them me who reads a average of 4 or 5 books a week read or listen to my music than watch tv so good so lovely to sit reading while my next book being downloaded and also can send backones i dont want to keep so easy but then once registered i send em backby the same process and a tip to the lady who has cracked her case buy a cover pop it in LOVELY NO PROBLEM STAFF ARE GREAT SO I M SOOOOOOOOOOO PLEASED WITH MINE

Okay, I seem to have gathered from all that chat that a US bought wi-fi kindle will work if registered to amazon.co.uk, but what about the 3G version? I am going to Florida soon and will be buying one from a store (bestbuy or somewhere similar, so will not be handing over billing information or anything like that) will the 3G still work back in the UK, or will I need to purchase a UK sim, such as vodafone and place that into the kindle?

I am also going to USA soon and want to buy a3g Kindle. Have read all the above and deduced that I can use/download in the UK no problem, but I constantly travel and want to know if I can access the internet free from my hotel room around the world even if they dont supply free wifi. Help, anyone?

So I have a daughter who lives in US. If I buy a Kindle with ads ($79) from Amazon.com and it is sent to her address can I then register it to my UK Amazon account when I am in the US and thru her computer put UK books on my Kindle? e24fc04721

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