40 points
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My Kobo Libra works perfectly with my self-hosted Calibre-Web, it syncs directly with it in the same way as it would sync with their online platform. You can also use both as it uses the later one as fallback.

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10 points

Agree, I would also recommend Kobo. In addition, at my Kobo I can also borrow books directly from our public library for free in Sweden. Very convenient.

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7 points

Thanks. Kobo libra h2o is high on my list

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2 points

I’ve been trying to run this with a Libra but the calibre-web sync has been borked for awhile. Kinda frustrating, tbh.

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1 point

I’ve tried this and get weird errors. I followed the instructions carefully (I think!), do you have to do anything special to get it to work?

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3 points

I also use a Kobo with Calibre-web and it syncs fine. It’s been about a year so I can’t remember specifics. I remember modifying settings in my Kobo to point to my Calibre-web URL and in Calibre-web settings allow Kobo sync and then make a Kobo shelf. All the books in Kobo shelf are what it syncs too

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1 point

Thanks, will try again. Maybe I just missed something …

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2 points

Not really, I did have to install and setup kepubify and i always convert the epub files to kepub manually (from the Calibre-Web page) after I upload new books, so far I only had minor issues when removing books from Kobo and suffered a random reset of the reading hours stat.

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1 point

Thanks! Will try again …

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1 point

I like mine. But I have to admit I’m not a frequent reader and only synced a few times.

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1 point

as in it pulls everything you add to the calibre library on a schedule rather than pulling individually/manually like from OPDS? how do you pull this off?

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4 points

You basically replace the URL that the reader uses to connect to their cloud platform with the one from your self hosted instance. Then the Kobo will just sync normally like it would do with their platform, the queries not understood by Calibre-Web (usually books not stored there or requests to the Kobo Store) are proxied by Calibre-Web to the Kobo Cloud.

More info here

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2 points

wow, i completely missed this the last time i tried out calibre-web, if it was even integrated. awesome, thanks. i also found this guide: https://code.mendhak.com/kobo-customizations/#syncing-kobo-with-calibre-web

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22 points

Pretty much all the big brands work with Calibre.

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4 points

Wirelessly pulling books from calibre and syncing the progress? I doubt my current kindle can do it.

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13 points

Well, you didn’t specify that requirement in your post.

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11 points

I believe Calibre has the ability to send books via the Kindle email address to get them on your device that way.

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5 points

This is how I get books to my Kindle. So, take that to the bank for what it’s worth.

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13 points

I run Koreader on a Kobo Libra 2. I just connect to my OPDS catalogue on my Calibre-Web instance. It’s not exactly a sync setup; it just gives me access to my library whenever I need to download something, and that covers my needs. There are several other sync options; check out Koreader’s features here: https://github.com/koreader/koreader/wiki

If you like it and decide you want to it, go through the list of supported devices and see what sort of sync capabilities are available for them (support for Kobo devices seems to be the best/have the most options).

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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11 points

There’s this company, which makes ebook readers that don’t seem to be tied to any particular vendor:

https://shop.boox.com/collections/all

They have so many models, though, that I have no idea where to start with them.

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6 points

They use GPL and won’t release the source. Fuck Boox

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5 points

I am very happy with my boox note 2. Use it to read books, manga, and take notes in OneNote for classes.

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3 points

It looks like it’s Android based. Can you run eBooks readers on it?

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2 points

Yes, I haven’t come across any apps so far that didn’t work. Performance is an issue with some apps, but nothing major.

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1 point

Thanks!

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1 point

I have the Leaf 2 and like it a lot. Can be a little slow sometimes, but nothing worse than any other ereader I’ve used.

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11 points

On the Kindle, you can email yourself e-books.

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7 points

I use it with calibre. Works perfect. Even displays the book covers (no matter where you got them) as lock screen background of the kindle. Can absolutely recommend this!

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2 points

I wish to track progress across multiple platform without amazon. So far calibre web and kobo ebook readers look like the go to

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4 points

You should put your requirements in your post.

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1 point

Also idk about the newer ones but the old ones last forever. You might need to change their battery but that’s not too hard. I got a kindle keyboard that’s been going strong for over a decade now.

Also kindles work fine with calibre, you just need a different file format. Mine can read PDFs! (I do not reccomend reading PDF scans on a kindle)

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1 point

Kindle doesn’t work with epub which is what majority of ebooks are

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7 points

It does work with epub now. They changed it not long ago (afaik)

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5 points

Can confirm it works now (not sure when change happened; pretty sure I’ve been using since early 2022). I regularly use epub on kindle.

They did recently drop mobi (or at least threaten to - they send me an email saying they are going to drop mobi capability after I send one to my kindle).

Kindle supported file types: • .EPUB • .PDF • .RTF • .DOC, .DOCX • .HTML, .HTM • .JPG, .JPEG, .GIF, .PNG, .BMP

https://www.amazon.com/sendtokindle/email

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3 points

I email ePubs to my kindle, I’m told Amazon automatically converts them, I’ve had 0 issues.

But calibre can convert them anyway.

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2 points

I always find you with that iconic user name around the Fediverse!

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1 point
*

Join me in the emoji shit post club!

Also I just realized my username looks extremely different on desktop vs mobile lmao. I just see the Android version.

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2 points

@mojo @protokaiser

You can convert them to azw3 with calibre. It’s what I do.

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