The Send to Kindle feature lets you send Microsoft Word documents directly to your Kindle library in mere minutes. A transferred file can appear like a Kindle book with adjustable font sizes or like a printed document with fixed layouts so as to preserve your page-design formatting.

Kindle book format 

This formatting style enables adjustable font sizes and page layouts. It also supports handwritten sticky notes with Kindle Scribe. It works well for storing documents with simple text formatting for better readability on smaller screens.


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Word document format:  

This formatting style preserves the page layouts and text formatting of your Word document. Your content will display in Kindle as it would appear when printed (except tracked changes and comments, which will not appear).

A. To disable user access to Send to Kindle, you can go the cloud policy link, locate the [Turn off Send to Kindle] policy and set it to [Enabled]. The policy will automatically be set in place and users will not have access to this feature. Alternatively, you can set your optional connected experiences policy to off thus disabling all optional connected experiences for your users.

tl;dr I've sent a number of files to my Kindle 10th's private email address about 3,5 hour ago and there is no reaction so far -- neither return / rejection email nor books appearing in the device.

When I have registered my "private" emails address for my Kindle 3rd generation ten years ago, I needed about 10-15 minutes between sending an attachment to that address and actually seeing a book in my device.

It is now 3.5 hours since I've sent a number of books to my freshly registered Kindle's email address and... there's nothing. No rejection emails and no books actually appearing in my Librardy / Downloaded section.

I have had anything that resembles a commercial book be silently rejected, while clearly non-commercial documents (personal documents, scraped web serial novels) go through successfully (in about 20min), even if they're very long. That may be the issue here. I stopped using it for that reason.

Right now, if someone from an unauthorised email address will try to send a content to your Kindle / your Kindle's emails address then that person will not be notified at all. Only you (Kindle owner) will get a notification to your own inbox.

I am more than sure that this was different 10 years ago (with Kindle 3rd) and that then the person trying to send anything to your Kindle was notified that conversion or transfer failed due to fact that sender is not among authorised email addresses.

Have you tried Send to Kindle ? It's a free application from Amazon. Install it on your PC and select which file[s],you want to transfer to which device. You can drag a bunch of files onto its icon on the desktop. My experience is that they all get transferred from my PC to Kindle Fire HD in nanoseconds.

I'm trying to find out how to create a link that will send the current page/article on my site to a users Kindle device. I haven't been able to find much about it, but I know it can be done because I see it here: _Henry_VI and Instapaper offers this functionality, see image. Does anyone know how to do this, or even where to start?

However, by default only the email address associated with the user's Amazon account is whitelisted. You must ask the user to add your email address to their Approved Senders list. Once that's done you just need their Kindle email address and you're good to go.

Each Kindle email address has two variations: @kindle.com and @free.kindle.com. The @free.kindle.com will only transfer documents over Wi-Fi, so that the user is not charged. If you use the @kindle.com email address, it may instead be transfered over 3G at a cost to the user. They can configure their settings to disallow this, but you should be careful not to send documents to this address unexpectedly.

Although this has been offered to American Kindle customers for a long time, the international support has been poorer. Until recently this wasn't support in Canada at all, even for wi-fi transfers. I don't know where this is and is not currently supported.

I have to agree with you here. If I could export the book as a MOBI format, I could import it on my Kindle Paperwhite. If I am going to read a digital book, I prefer to use a Kindle. The "10 minutes" per book took me maybe 2 hours. Never again will I do this, unless it becomes push-button simple.

In some cases, converting from Logos to ebook formats is the only option if the book is not available in other ebook formats other than Logos. I'm currently working on converting The Revised English Bible to kindle format as because as far as I've been able to find the only ebook format it is available in is in Logos. It does have consistent formatting for the book and chapter headings, but unfortunately Word requires the headings to be on their own line, and the REB has the chapter numbers on the same line with the text of the chapter, so I have to add a carriage return after the chapter numbers and then do the exercise of selecting all text with similar formatting and changing the chapter numbers to Heading 2 to get a proper hierarchical table of contents.

A few other tips - 1) I've been following another procedure which is found here: _a_Logos_Resource_to_an_eReader_format_$28Kindle,_Nook,_etc.$29. It also works well. 2) The only caveat is that in Step 11 it tells you to use Calibre to export the book to your device, which does work, but I ended up with a huge flat TOC with the books and chapters all in one lengthy list. After a bit of investigation I discovered that it was automatically converting the book to MOBI format on my Kindle. If I used Calibre to manually convert the book to Amazon's native AZW3 format first, then that is the format that it will transfer to the device, and you end up with a proper hierarchical table of contents, being able to expand the books to get the chapter links (hope that makes sense).

As one who almost did option #2, I just want to make sure other browsers of this forum like me can find that #3 exists. I, for one, think it's super cool that Faithlife still hosts Biblia.com when they have app.logos.com, ostensibly for just such backwards-compatible and lower-spec use cases. Even if limited in its current state, it may be able to get the job done for some.

Thank you for sharing these options. I've bought so many books over the years, but haven't tried to read them outside of Logos since they got rid of the Vyrso app. I was just starting to read a book and was feeling bummed about my best option being to read it on an iOS device and just leave a tab open until I finished the book. This thread shows me it's possible to export the book to Kindle, and while not perfect, I'm so glad to find this, as I've been having trouble with my eyes lately on computer screens. Being able to read on my Kindle is a real blessing!

If you have a paid version of Microsoft Word, there is now an add-on that restores the "Send to Kindle" functionality, and it's really good! Yes, we're still subject to the 100 page limit, so obviously you wouldn't want to use this for lots of books all at once. For me, it's just a way to be able to read the books I've purchased on a more eye-friendly device.

You mentioned some having ethical concerns. If it's for your own use, I'm not sure what those concerns would be. I believe this falls under "fair use", and I'm very thankful that the means to do so are still present. No book exported in this way should be shared with anyone else, as I believe the intent is to allow us to get the most use out of the resources we've purchased.

If you send an EPUB file to to a Kindle it will be converted to MOBI with KindleGen. If you send a MOBI file to a Kindle it will be sent unprocessed. If you send an EPUB file and tick the Kepubify checkbox, it will be converted into a Kobo EPUB using Kepubify. If you send a MOBI file to a Kobo, it will not be converted.

Your ebook will be stored on the server as long as your Kobo/Kindle is viewing the unique key and is connected to wifi. It will be deleted irrevocably when the key expires about 30 seconds after you close the browser, generate a new key or disable wifi on your ereader.

I want to be able to send documents with a particular label to my kindle. I would like them to be in a format that allows the Kindle to set the text format and size easily. Preferable it would be in something like Mobi.

I just wanted to check on something about your workflow. Are you using the Amazon Kindle? If that's the case, I'm sorry to say that we don't have the Kindle integration available right now. However, we do have a request to add Kindle to our list of integrations. Please let me know if you would like to be added to that request.

I use the Send to Kindle desktop application to send epub ebooks converted to Mobi format to my Kindle. Since enabling two factor authentication (using Authy code generator), I am unable to log the app in to Amazon and so unable to upload this way.

Although point 2. doesn't apply as there is no error message, adding the code from the authenticator app to the end of the password and re-submitting worked and the application logged in successfully.

In Calibre, the "Send email from" needs to be the Gmail username that's whitelisted in your Amazon account, Hostname is smtp.gmail.com, Port is 587, username is the Gmail username again, Password is the app password you generated specifically for Calibre, and TLS is selected.

Hi there, getting your kindle books on your iPad is as simple as downloading the kindle app from the app store, once downloaded and signed into with your amazon account, all your books should be displayed nicely in the "cloud" tab and avilable to download and be picked up at the same point you left off.

If it's pdf files and not books you're looking to transfer, I'm not sure if the app will do this for you so you may need to plug your kindle into your computer and transfer the files from your computer to your iPad via iTunes or something similar (apps such as dropbox). 152ee80cbc

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