Sentences with phrase «sideloading books on»

The possibility to install Google Android Marketplace (remember, by default Kindle Fire only comes with Amazon Marketplace), sideloading books on Kindle Fire is another enticing possibility as well.
I've been using the same microSD card for years and it has all my sideloaded books on it.
Angry that you can't automatically tag sideloaded books on your Kindle through Calibre (or other library management sw; like you used to be able to do and still can do with Kobo)?
That means you can sideload your books on the Nook by methods like loading them on the SD card, emailing them to yourself, or syncing them from your computer through the USB cable.

Not exact matches

I would love to jump on the Kobo H20 but I dislike the way sideloaded books are formated on it (large spaces on bottom, tight on top) it's awkward.
Buying an e-book from a website and sideloading it onto your Kindle will never be as easy as buying it from the Kindle store (though if the world's governments would take the eminently sensible step of legalizing jailbreaking, someone could develop a product that let Kindles easily access third - party stores on the obvious grounds that if you buy a Kindle, you still have the right to decide whose books you'll read on it, otherwise you don't really own that Kindle).
TTS also works on sideloaded books and -LSB-...]
Only a small portion of the built - in memory is available to sideloaded books, and non-B & N books can't access the dictionaries, can't be highlighted, and can't be grouped on shelves with B&N books.
I read books bought from the BN store, I do not sideload anything nor read pdfs anywhere but on my tablet.
Amazon allows you to manage collections on - line for books purchased from them but not for sideloaded books.
Once the books have been loaded, there's no real way of finding content on the Oasis since you have to tag sideloaded content manually and that's just ridiculous.
No sideloading means I won't be buying any more nook books as long as this policy endures, and I usually spend a couple hundred dollars on ebooks every year.
I think they really did it so people will not sideload books anymore and increases peoples dependency on buying books directly from Kobo.
With Amazon, send your sideloaded books to the cloud through a simple app or an email, and you can download them at any time on your Kindle, iPhone, iPad from the cloud in a breeze.
In particular, I don't think that I'll buy a lot of books on the device, but will definitely sideload a lot of them.
No dictionary or highlighting on sideloaded books is a very poor choice!
2) Once you can sideload books and next firmware to hopefully fix the epub / pdf black on black issue, I'd like to know if you can read books from Overdrive.
They still need to allow highlighting and dictionary on * all * sideloaded books including their own sideloaded Kobo books!
The library menu is buggy right now, no e-books that you sideload on the device show up there, although books you purchase do.
New users might struggle with the concept of sideloading in their own books or even knowing on where to download them from the internet.
There is no integrated bookstore on either, so you will have to sideload in your own books or borrow them from the library.
Selecting this shows all books that are on the device whether they were purchased, from OverDrive or sideloaded.
First is indexing: much faster on Kobo without any «stuck» sideloaded books like I frequently experienced with Kindle.
As it stands, you can sideload in your books, since the reader can import anything on your SD Card to the device's main memory.
I had my Nook books and others on it and was sideloading my favorite apps as well as a launcher.
I just ordered one — the Kobo wifi feels much better than the Nook Touch to me, and I didn't want to face constant book ads on the front screen of the Nook or only have 25 % of the memory available for sideloaded books.
, it's DRM - encumbered ebook format, the always - on ads, the lack of root, the lack of EPUB support, the inability to sideload books, and so many other proprietary, Big Brother problems.
I would like to be proven wrong, but for the time being, it seems that my dream of getting books from multiple bookstores on an e-ink device without the need to sideload and / or decrypt encrypted data is just that: a dream.
My hubs was wrassling with his T1 the other day... we never did get it to work right on his comp; had to go thru a different computer and use Calibre to sideload some epub books he bought from a professional website.
There are some functionality caveats as well: depending on your region, you may not be able to download books over Wi - Fi (Bulgaria appears to be limited to sideloading via USB, for example), and the Kindle catalog appear to still be focused primarily on English - language titles.
These are all pretty standard formats, which means you can read books borrowed from your public library on this e-reader — or you can plug it into your computer and sideload content.
Of course, since Kobo on the PlayBook doesn't play nicely with books other than its own, you will need an alternative book reader or the Kindle app sideloaded on the device.
To be fair, you are also paying Amazon to handle credit cards and «customer service»:-D That is totally worth it to me — when I had my own store up on my website, I was spending a lot of time helping customers who didn't know how to sideload books, or had download problems, or just general technophobia.
Unfortunately Amazon makes lock - in easy, so a lot of people don't avail themselves of other options, even other eBook options which are easy if you use a tablet or phone to read on — that's why I purchase both Nook and Kindle books, and a lot of my SF directly from Baen eBooks where I can sideload them to my iPad.
Also it does not work on my sideloaded books.
For entertainment, the featured apps are: Netflix — a first on tablets; mSpot Movies (for rentals); Zinio Reader; Amazon Kindle; an e-reader for viewing sideloaded books; and a video player.
It only works on Kobo ebooks, though, not sideloaded books.
Add to that the fear that such a branch might actually open and trample local competition and... somehow, slowly, most ebooks stores replaced Adobe DRM with a hassle free watermark on their epubs and mobis, plus in some stores you can use a send - to - kindle function, so there's no need to sideload books via USB (I think ARe has this function now as well).
When viewing all books in the library, the covers for sideloaded EPUBs will appear on some books, but if you view those same books in the My Files section no book covers are shown.
I now sideload books onto my ereader via Calibre or easily access them via apps on my iPad, android phone and tablet.
On the other hand, since Sony's Reader lacks 3G for a constant connection and isn't as tightly integrated with their ebook store, there's less opportunity for data collection, particularly if you stick w / sideloaded books.
One other nice thing with B&N reading devices is that they support not just B&N's Adobe DRM scheme, but also «regular» Adobe DRM as used by stores like Kobo, All Romance, Sony, Books on Board and Diesel, so you can sideload books from those sources and they'll work just Books on Board and Diesel, so you can sideload books from those sources and they'll work just books from those sources and they'll work just fine.
This is the basis of the search function on the device and it happens for every book whether you add a novel from the Kindle Store, get a periodical emailed to your Kindle, or sideload a manual from your computer.
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