Once a book is on your Kindle device or reading app, you can read it just like any other Kindle Book. For specific help reading on your device (like how to change the font or save a bookmark), visit Amazon Device Support.

There was probably a time when your home was brimming with bookshelves, stuffed to the gills with novels you have already read or yet plan to read. These days, a single Kindle can clear out all that clutter, putting virtually every book you could want to read in the palm of your hands.


How Do I Download Books To My Kindle Device


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Instead, open the Amazon website in a browser on your iPhone and find the book you want to buy. Select the Kindle version and buy it. The eBook will automatically appear in your Kindle app library (as well as in the library on your Kindle device, if you have one), ready to be downloaded and read.

I purchase some books in Kindle format, but the bulk of my Bible study books are in Logos or other Bible software formats, plus I've also purchased some books in Apple Books format, which Kindle obviously cannot natively read due to DRM and the different formats.

1. What would be the easiest way to get Logos books (or other non-Kindle format books) onto a Kindle device? Would PDF be the best route to go? I would probably need to send book files to the Kindle in batches (possibly per-chapter) to work around copyright restrictions.

6. Are there any advantages to reading exported Logos books on a Kindle device versus a 10.5" iPad Pro? I love my iPad Pro, and it does an excellent job for reading, as well as for getting some work done on the go (where I haven't needed to carry a notebook with me most places now). However, the 10.5" iPad Pro is a large, bright screen, and battery life still needs to be charged at least once a day, plus with the other apps and notifications, it's easy to rabbit trail unless I switch on DND.

If you mean the later, you would not need to convert anything... you would simply run the FL Android apps. If you mean the former, there are tutorials for converting Logos books. It isnt hard, but it isnt "push a button" quick either. NOTE: having a Logos book on a Kindle eInk device is great for simple reading, but you can't transfer notes/highlights back.

Whether you're talking about a Kindle Fire type of device or a Kindle eInk reader (seems obvious you must mean this latter option though), I would say don't bother. It isn't worth it if you already have an iPad Pro.

3. I think (not positive) you can be signed into Kindle on as many devices as you want--what is restricted is the individual books, which will have their own DRM limits. For instance, back in the day I had some textbooks on Kindle and found that some had DRM that only allowed me to have them on 2 devices. Other books I never ran into a DRM limit with, but also never needed or tried to have them on more than 3 or 4 devices.

4. Removing a book from your device is easy (but also kind of pointless since they hold so many books), but the sent-to-kindle books will still be stored on your Kindle cloud. You can then delete them from the cloud by going to the relevant website.

For another, the iPad app has recently introduced a scrolling feature where e-books no longer page turn, but now scroll along the way Logos books do. This may not seem like much, but it's actually a very big step forward. Kindle was stuck trying to make digital book simply imitate print books, but this is the wrong way to think about ebooks. Digital books are a different medium with a different set of advantages (and possibly drawbacks) and when you just try and make a digital book mimic a physical book you are actually hamstringing what some of the advantages are to ebooks, while you don't actually gain the advantage of a physical book by mimicking it on a digital format. I won't bother going into more detail here, but suffice it to say that I think the scrolling feature is a superior and more natural digital experience over the page-turn feature that any Kindle e-reader is going to be stuck in.

#1: For sending Logos resources specifically to a Kindle device, Mark Barnes created a great video and step-by-step process after the direct functionality was removed from within the desktop version. Here's the link:

I was referring to #1. I forgot the Kindle Fire existed for a moment (you mean there are other tablets besides the iPad?). ;-) I was referring to #1 since I already own an iPad Pro and see no reason to invest in an Android tablet (since I heavily use Apple's ecosystem), plus my iPad Pro would certainly be superior to the Kindle Fire. my curiosity is how regular Kindle e-Ink devices stack up against tablets for reading.

I understand that there are overlaps there, but when I am just "plain" reading, I think that nothing beats an eInk Kindle. My current device is a paperwhite. Great "readability" in all areas, including size and the type of illumination.

Since you have an iPad Pro (I do, too), let me ask if you feel the strain of the brightness of the screen at all when you read stuff on it. My older eyes can't handle it for very long, so I read on an inverted black background. Even with that, I can feel my eyes strain. With an e-ink device like a Kindle, I don't experience that. Another thing to mention is that a Kindle is a devoted e-reader. If you are like me, I can get distracted by the many things I can do with an iPad Pro, which makes it harder to concentrate when I read. A Kindle is way smaller and lighter than an iPad Pro, so if you are carrying it while you are out and about, that will be easier.

Great points, which is why I wanted to ask fellow Logos users versus merely reading reviews on Amazon and tech sites. In terms of your comments on eye-strain, due to my work and school, the majority of my time is spent reading some type of screen (unless I'm eating, sleeping, or occasionally reading a print book. I should probably take a vacation somewhere to get away from my tech devices, but then I'd probably take my DSLR along and look at its LCD screen during my vacation). Since I use Apple devices across the board, the screen quality has been excellent, and I don't notice major eye-strain even after the hours I spend on my iMac Pro, iPad Pro, or iPhone screens (occasionally, I'll get a slight headache through my eyes if I'm working intensely with screens, or it could be a virus or something else since it only occurs occasionally).

1. Good information on that point. Thanks for that. Another benefit to the iPad Pro is since it runs all the apps for the books I read (Logos, Apple Books, Kindle, etc.), I can launch the app and all the books are there. No conversion process needed.

5. Thanks for the info. In terms of highlighting, I don't do a ton of highlighting (I probably should do more). Generally I just read books then copy/paste excerpts of books into documents, add notes with them, then eventually file them in Nota Bene (my academic word processor).

Thanks for also mentioning the scrolling feature. I haven't tried it yet. I've been using the page turning feature and overall felt comfortable with it over the years as I graduated from using mostly print books to mostly electronic books. It might be time to graduate into scrolling. :-)

When "study" reading, I typically don't highlight books (print or electronic). Maybe I should but I generally never do. In terms of note taking, I generally copy/paste excerpts from books I need to refer to later, type some notes under them, then export everything which eventually goes into Nota Bene (my academic word processor). So my notetaking at the time of reading is very basic and simple since everything ultimately goes into Nota Bene. I don't use Notes in Logos (or other apps) for permanently storing notes since I ultimately consolidate all my research in Nota Bene. 2351a5e196

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