![]() ![]() ![]() NB: PDFs do *not* normally convert to any other form acceptably. I use it to convert the odd Mobi/AZW3 file to ePub which is my preferred storage format. (And as a considerable fringe benefit, Calibre can also convert between supported formats. Calibre can go online to retrieve metadata about the book to be added to the book's listing in the database.Ĭalibre can also communicate with the book viewer device, by WiFi of a direct USB cable connection, and add or remove books on device. New eBooks are imported into the library. Mt Calibre library lies on an HD devoted to it on my Win10 desktop. Calibre's principal purpose it to create and manage an eBook library on your main machine. I use an open source application called Calibre. ![]() The other part of the equation here is managing my eBook library. I read them on the desktop, not the mobile device. I select by title and author, and don't normally use Bookshelf view, and PDFs are problematic on tablet devices because they don't reflow to fit the screen. I don't need a cover image to know what a book is. The Premium version I use adds Bookshelf view and PDF viewer as part of the app, but I can live without both. ![]() While I prefer ePub, I can view anything. It can view PDF and CBR/CBZ comics files with plugins. It views Epub, Mobi/AZW3, FB2 (a Russian eBook format, HTML, plain text and other things as delivered. The win for me with FBReader is that it handles any eBook format. I've looked at most of the Android eBook readers, and the question is your needs. I've been reading electronically for 20 years, starting on a Palm OS device. For example, if you are an Amazon customer, and get your books from Amazon, you might be best served by using Amazons' Kindle app. The first question is what sort of things you read. There are many eBook viewers, and I've looked at most of them. ![]()
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