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Buy a Kobo EReader.
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Hack the EReader so you don't have to sign up with Walmart.
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Install Calibre on your PC.
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Install Kobo Driver Extension for Calibre.
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Use a VPN (I prefer Mullvad), and go to your favorite Book piracy website for epubs.
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Download epub books.
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Connect Kobo device to your PC via USB.
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Use Calibre to upload epub books to Kobo.
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Disconnect Kobo from PC.
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Profit.
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I have a kobo but I don’t remember having to do anything with Walmart. Rest is spot on though.
Kobo was sold exclusively through Walmart in the US (at least when I bought my Kobo). I think they recently ended the partnership.
I thought they've been available directly from Kobo since they launched in the US.
As for other retail stores, they used to be exclusive to Walmart, but I now see them elsewhere (e.g. Target and Amazon both have them).
Not sure when things changed but all I know is that when I bought mine years ago the Kobo site redirected me to Walmart and that's where I had to buy it. My e-reader even displays the Walmart logo on it when I power it off.
Got mine off Amazon in 2021, am Murican
Or just:
- buy a Kobo eReader from Kobo directly
- connect Overdrive w/ your local library
No need for piracy, read a bunch of library books if you don't want to pay for books.
Bought a kobo recently. Bought it direct from Kobo, Walmart wasn't involved at all in any step. Worked perfectly out of the box with Caliber too. Nice little device, library interface could use some work but it's functional.
I recommend installing calibre web on a home server, installing koreader on the Kobo, and accessing your eBook library over your WiFi and OPDS.
Koreader is such a good reading experience, I never want to go back to stock firmware (well, except for the dictionaries maybe, those are better.)
Is there no way to just install Linux on the Reader? I don't understand any of those words in the hacking instructions.
The Kobo EReader is already a Linux machine.
As far as bypassing the sign up, here are my quick notes on how to do so step by step.
I meant a workstation OS. Or any Linux OS that's not locked to a corporate account and probably filled with spyware.
here are my quick notes on how to do so step by step.
I don't even understand the first sentence of these instructions. "Mount the device" followed by a bunch of seemingly random letters and characters. Mount it on what? What do I do with these?
I meant a workstation OS. Or any Linux OS that's not locked to a corporate account and probably filled with spyware.
Yes, though I have not tried to utilize this:
https://github.com/Quill-OS/quill
I don't even understand the first sentence of these instructions. "Mount the device" followed by a bunch of seemingly random letters and characters. Mount it on what? What do I do with these?
These instructions require a very basic understanding of the Linux command line and file system. As does installing a Linux OS without a GUI helper.
Quil os is an option for some.https://github.com/Quill-OS/quill
It's a bit involved. Def not easier than the above but it's an option. It worked for me for a while.
"make" usually implies already having one, advising to just go out when given the option to recycle an existing kindle with a debloated experience to instead go and buy something else is encouraging ewaste
Don’t let the ugly UI scare you off. Once you get past that awful first impression, Calibre turns out to be a pretty great app.
Couldn't have said it better myself. The UI looks ancient and cartoonish, but once you actually start using it, you don't even notice because of what it can actually do.
Nice web frontend that doesn't look like 1993:
https://github.com/janeczku/calibre-web
I run that, but somehow the web database got borked when I setup the Kobo Sync. DB works fine in Calibre desktop but web UI only shows new books unless I search for them. Haven't messed with it much, but on my to-do list to figure out why.🤦♂️
Step 1: Buy a Kindle on Amazon...
You gotta be kidding me
Well what were you expecting? This is like when people install GrapheneOS on Pixels, because it's still the best platform to have a Google-free device.
It's entirely possible that someone wants to buy a Kindle because of it being a great device, but not want to be tied to Amazon's data mining exercises and/or buy books from them because of their behaviour as a publishing company.
I think he's trying to point out that if someone were that concerned with trying to not be data mined by Amazon, they wouldn't have an Amazon account to be able to order a Kindle in the first place.
If you actually read the OP article, they specify that there aren't any other ebook readers available in their region, and that they could use it without connecting it to their Amazon account, or even to the internet at all.
The article starts out explaining that other devices are not sold in Brazil; Kindle is the only option.
Why not buy a Kobo eReader? Just as good, and better in some ways.
That said, I'm in the US, so I don't know about other countries.
Why? I wrote about how to use a Kindle without tying it to Amazon. Kinda hard buying one anywhere else but from Amazon…
It was a good article. I bet if you think really hard you will see the irony this reader found with an Amazon-free Kindle... Purchased from Amazon.
Also, I heard that some people pirate books for Kindle.
My SO does, and it totally works.
That said, there are more options than Kindle. The Kobo eReader recently got a big revamp, and is now in many ways better than Kindle. And it works directly with library books (at least in the US, not sure about other countries).
So if you want an eReader, shop around first before jumping to the conclusion that you need to find workarounds for Kindle.
Hardware and software are different things.
It's perfectly reasonable to want the hardware of a Kindle, while not wanting to deal with the software shenanigans. I'm sure plenty of people on Lemmy have bought a laptop before then put a different OS onto it, for example.
Even putting that aside, did you not read the first paragraph? The author clearly states that alternatives like Boox and Kobo aren't available in their country.
You actually as if their position is unreasonable. It really isn't.
Have you used other ebook readers?
My mother in law had a nook, and that was one of the worst goddamned devices i'd ever used. Low res screen and cheap buttons, buttons that you had to use all the time because the touch controls were so awful. The interface was just extraordinarily bad.
I hate to say it, but the Kindle line are the best devices on the market for ebooks. But I'd pay a little extra if Besos got kicked in the balls with every purchase.
I was wondering why anyone would go to the trouble when you can just buy a different brand.
In Brazil, you can pick any e-reader you want, as long as it’s a Kindle. (Kobo, Boox, and other brands don’t sell their devices here.)
That’s too bad, and surprising since later in the article it mentions that Kobo does have a store in Brazil to sell EPUB files, but not their readers.
It's a shame indeed. Kobo used to sell their devices here, but they pulled out years ago. We also had a local bookseller that tried to face off Amazon, Saraiva, that released its own e-reader in ~2017, called Lev. (Probably a rebranded Chinese device; it was awful.) It didn't last. Right now, we have only Kindle devices for buying, and even that isn't complete — Kindle Scribe hasn't arrived yet.
I bought a Kobo Clara last year and it works. I can even buy books. I live in Brazil.
I expected a method to root the device...
maybe that will finally get me interested on a kindle
I bought one years ago. Maybe 2018? I think it's a kindle touch 8th gen, ad-supported. Cost me ~60€, ad-supported. It got jailbroken and KOReader installed. It has stayed offline since, so those ads have long since expired.
It gets the job done. I've never been in the amazon e-book ecosystem, and I don't want to be licensing my books at their mercy.
That was pretty thin on details.
I've had a Fire 8 for a while now that I bought because it was cheap as hell, thinking I could subvert it to the side of good. To an extent I guess I did, but I'd still rather use an old android 4.1 7" that doesn't have a lock screen I can't get rid of, so I have one less swipe to read for a few minutes when I wake up in the middle of the night.
I wish I could make it work like that one, but so far no go. And you can't get rid of some of the Amazon bullshit, so there's that. It just feels like its sitting there waiting to fuck me over somehow so I don't bother.
Kindle Fire is a different beast: they run Android AOSP modified by Amazon and usually has low-end specs. I'd not recommend getting one anyway — tied to Amazon or otherwise.