First startup: screen orientation landscape. The first thing I do is turn on dark mode. The reader collects books from everywhere. There is an option to select which folder to pull from but you have to type out the entire file path so I am not bothering with that. There were no issues with importing books.

The reader, Works perfectly. I make the book single page, turn the reader to dark mode and increase the font size 250%. Journey to the West loads with no issue. The picture color is normal even in dark mode.


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Please correct anything I may have gotten wrong about the apps. I would also like to hear about why you may disagree with my choice of app. There were a few more recommended to me but I felt they were not good enough to include or I ran into issues that I could not solve. Feel free to recommend me more E-book readers to look at. These apps were reviewed in the order they were downloaded.

Moon+ Reader is a simple and powerful reader thanks to which you can convert your Android device into a genuine miniature e-book. Especially useful, as one would expect, for users of tablets or mobile phones with relatively large screens.

I have prepared an epub-format book with its own css. It passes epubcheck without errors or warnings. Reasily shows it as expected. Moon reader fails with following: Fails to embed woff fonts. ttf wor...

I tried a few, colordict doesn't look good, and other apps don't integrate well with moon+ reader :(, so is there an app that looks good and works well with moon+ reader ? (I know about look up but that doesn't look good either)

Thanks for this information. I am buying my first e-reader and have a had a hard time settling on one with all of the features I need: epub, e-ink, touch screen and most importantly, a way to export the notes and highlights one takes while reading. Though I am ambivalent about the LCD screen on the nook color, the ability to use this app seems perfect (I know the Kindle and Sony Touch Reader have annotation services but these seem pretty limited). Now, I am hoping that there is a way that it can be used with a rooted nook simple touch -- then I'd be all set, forever.

I'm guessing that Moon + just doesn't support a lot of CSS and that "Preview with Publisher Formatting" just doesn't work. If that's the case, so be it, but I find it hard to believe. Also, I would appreciate any online references to CSS support for each ebook software. Maybe moon+ doesn't have a lot of mindshare, but I find it hard to believe that I'm the only one to notice these deficiencies.

You are absolutely correct about your assumption that the Moon+ reader is overlaying it's own generic CSS over the publisher provided CSS. This has been a battleground in the ebook world for a while now but we are starting to get more support for the publisher side CSS because fundamentally you can't have 'one CSS to rule them all (ebooks)' Sure, at first it looks flashy and nice like you mention above but once you start importing a variety of books with different formatting needs you begin to see the limitations of this generic CSS almost immediately.

I've tested multiple Android Epub readers with a bilingual epub I made, where the two languages are distinguished by the background colour and the font style (the second language is in italics). Only the Gitden Epub reader displays the background color and the font style properly.

Users of DAISY players can navigate through the recording/book by sections, sub-sections, chapter or pages. Bookmarks can be inserted at any point, and there is a 'resume' option which continues playback from the point the reader last reached (rather than going back to the beginning, which is what happens with conventional CDs).

Tablets and ebooks

Many sites will also provide Ebooks. Ebooks can be read on tablets and ereaders which provide options for enlarging the text. A growing range of tablet and ereader accessories are available including mounts for tablets such as the iPad, and switches and switch interfaces for use with tablets and ebook readers. These switches could, for example, be used to turn the page of an ebook.

Before you purchase a Braille display, try several to ensure that the one you choose is comfortable to use and provides the functions you need. Many screen readers offer two outputs: speech and Braille. Depending on your requirements, using the speech output facility of a screen reader will be a cheaper option than harnessing a Braille display to it. We recommend you speak to the RNIB for advice as these devices can be expensive.

Hallo, I am trying to do precisely that. I have a Galaxy Note 10.1 with dropbox and moonreader pro installed, and I would like to instruct my moonreader to use the dropbox so that my books are synched with other devices. However, I don't understand what to do at all. In parameters, there's an option to use dropbox, I have checkt it. But apart from that, I just can't figure out what to do. I don't even know what "the shelf" is, and I can't even locate the folder where my dropbox files are situated. I feel pretty stupid, since all the explanations I have found here and there seem to take it for granted that these things are self-obvious. Can anybody help me? Thanks in advance.

But none of the methods above will sync highlighting in android Moon Reader, will they? I'd like to sync highlighting and notes to several android devices, but so far haven't found a way to do that using Moon Reader. Using Google Books will do it, but there is no way to organize documents in Google Play Books, which in time will make finding anything most trying. Then one could try using "The File Converter" to convert epub documents into pdf's, but still with the links. But the links seem to appear at the end of a document such that it's most difficult to reach the link and then get back to where you were.

Maybe someone has found something that works well for android where notes and highlighting is synced to other devices AND that has that wonderful functionality that an epub document gives you for clicking on links? Yes?

I am not sure if you can sync highlights and comments in Moon+ across devices. 

To do just that, I successfully employed Mantano/Bookari ereader app and subscribe to their cloud service for the past 4 years. It worked like a charm across my Android phones, Amazon Fire tablets (Mantano/Bookari sideloaded), and eInk devices (Nooks from Barnes and nobles and Onyx InkBook). 

Alas, my happy sincying ended abruptly over the weekend as Bookari servers went off line. The Company, Mantano, has not even commented on the shutdown. 

Now I am looking for a solution/alternative to sync my readings across devices again...

Read this article: Moon+ Reader Pro: How to sync bookmarks between devices. FAQs, Problems. 

Very detailed explanation with mobile phone snapshots. 

raymondlamsk.blogspot.sg/2018/03/moon-reader-how-to-sync-bookmark-bet-devices.html

The Onyx Boox Poke3 appealed to me because it is an eink reader, but it also runs Android. Android 10, to be precise. And since Libby (for Overdrive) and two readers, Moon+ Reader Pro and KOReader, all run on Android, I thought it might be worth a try.

It also comes with a web browser, which is essentially the Android WebView; a calendar, an email service, a calculator, a clock, a music player, and other things that have no place on an ebook reader.

A complete book reader with built-in online and offline library support, Moon+ Reader impresses with its wide array of features and dashing performance, turning out to be a hard to resist app for book lovers.

Reading and customization features: Moon+ Reader has it all -- 12 pleasant themes with automatic day/night mode switching, advanced key-mapping that enables you to assign swipe gestures or screen taps to events such as navigation or search, quick visual tweaks for fonts and alignment, text-to-speech, highlights, annotations, and online as well as offline dictionary integration. Getting used to all these takes time, but once you become familiar with them, you end up with one of the most advanced mobile e-book readers around.

Makes reading on the go a pleasure: With its pleasant design and smooth overall performance, this app can make reading on your smartphone or tablet a more enjoyable experience than the one provided by the limited default Android book reader, helping you to discover and grab wonderful free books easily and digest them properly, whether it's a thick novel by Tolstoy or a piece of flash fiction from a Smashwords author.

The following tables detail e-book reader software for the Android operating system. Each section corresponds to a major area of functionality in an e-book reader software. The comparisons are based on the latest released version.

Other e-book readers for Android devices include: BookShout!, Nook e-Reader applications for third party devices and OverDrive Media Console. Additionally, Palmbookreader reads some formats (such as PDB and TXT) on Palm OS and Android devices. The Readmill app, introduced in February 2011, reads numerous formats on Android and iOS devices but shut down July 1, 2014.[10] Another popular app Bluefire Reader was removed from Google Play Store in 2019.

Disappointingly, the biggest app failures on Android are the apps for the big e-reader companies. I found reading in the Kobo apps, as well as the Libby app for library e-books, to pale in comparison to using a more generic e-reading app such as Moon+ Reader. The Kindle app for Android was fine, once I configured it properly.

I tried with WebView as we can select text in 2.3 and later versions of android OS on long touch event. I am not getting the window.getSelection() object so my JavaScript is not highlighting the text. ff782bc1db

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