I second this: buy a paper book and gift it away, and download an electronic copy for yourself from wherever you can.
There are also several legit free ebook sites, like:
* https://openlibrary.org/ (by the internet archive)
* https://gutenberg.org
* https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu (lists 3 million free ebooks online)
There are others.
@afewbugs I deDRMed mine before they shut the door last year? I can’t recall. There was a change and it’s more difficult if not impossible now to do. I think it was to do with having files on your computer vs your Kindle.
I have a Kobo. The Rakuten store books are DRMed but it reads mostly anything. My XTInk X4 won’t accept DRM. I buy from ebooks.com (here in Perth even!) and use Calibre to transfer and strip as needed. But not all their books have DRM. Seems just ones I’m interested in.
@considermycat @afewbugs I didn't try this method, but recently bought a book and only got a .acsm file. This first method: https://ratfactor.com/b/drm-sucks was the only thing that worked for me.
And ofc, Annas-archive (long live)
Yeah, it's the same thing I've done, after the first week when I downloaded the stuff I had bought on Amazon I deleted the network connections and put it in airplane mode, and it has stayed that way.
But I'm weird, I just want it to stay the way that it was when I got it, and I don't think that I will need any updates, it's there to show text, and it does that well enough, so it doesn't get to update.
@sotolf @afewbugs Yeah, I've got, not the first ever model, but the first cheap-model one that dropped the keyboard. It's been in aeroplane mode for over a decade at this point.
TBH I've never managed to be a big ebook person, but the ones I have bought since then have been indie stuff from Smashwords via Calibre and a USB cable. If I want something from a big publisher I still just buy paper copies.
@afewbugs I like Kobo as an e-reader. I just bought a color so I can read comics on it as well.
All the DRM stripping I've done has been through Calibre and the (DeDRM) plugin. Any books I couldn't remove the DRM from, I acquired through other means. As for "from any source" Calibre can also convert most things to epub and mobi.
Kobo has an ebook store. Ebooks.com has a UK shop. Some authors will have a way to purchase ebooks from their websites.
Thalia.de sells English language ebooks as well.
I've started self-hosting my ebooks and audiobooks (because there got to be so many) so feel free to ping me!
@afewbugs It's so frustrating when the terms suddenly change, which is why I've stripped DRM and we now self-host all our media (movies, TV shows, music, ebooks, audiobooks, etc.).
The only problem is with the rise of AI datacenters, the price of hard drives has increased drastically so we're keeping an eye on prices because we're starting to run out of space. (And we need to move things into a new case with available space. When we remove the oil boiler and the fuel tank to put in the heat pump, we might set up a wall mounted server in the basement.)
@jschwa1 I got an email from them, if you didn't you're probably okay.
"Affected devices include Kindle 1st and 2nd Generation, Kindle DX and DX Graphite, Kindle Keyboard, Kindle 4, Kindle Touch, Kindle 5, and Kindle Paperwhite 1st Generation."
@afewbugs Maybe you can put KOReader onto your Kindle and continue using it? https://koreader.rocks/
Getting it set up is, honestly, a bit janky. And the design is sometimes a bit rough around the edges - but! - it has _all_ the options, displays all the formats and even has PDF-reflowing, for reading A4 PDFs comfortably.
@afewbugs ... it looks like KOReader supports all Kindles
https://github.com/koreader/koreader/wiki/Installation-on-Kindle-devices
Gosh, it is only a half-recommendation though. It really does seem a bit nerds-for-nerds with the instructions for setting up.
I KOreadered my Kindle with Winterbreak, it was easy. Highly recommend it!
@afewbugs Kobo is great. Tolino is the same hardware, but the software is worse.
I have the "Kobo Clara BW", kind of "Kindle Paperwhite". You can copy ePubs directly via USB.
its a bit of a rabbit hole; i would recommend starting with
https://github.com/apprenticeharper/DeDRM_tools/wiki/Exactly-how-to-remove-DRM
I have not tried doing this since before they locked down the kindle downloads, your mileage may vary
they do have a kindle reader app for phones that might allow you to keep reading DRM-encumbered data
I appreciate that would not completely solve the problem
I use a handheld BOOX, which is a full-fledged Android device. And it's possible to install the Kindle Reader app on it, too.
@afewbugs I’ve also migrated from Kindle, and carried all my books. Looks like it’s already the consensus but I’d also say Kobo. Both as e-reader and to buy the books.
I use Calibre to manage my ebook files and sync them to my e-reader. They can be in any format. https://calibre-ebook.com
And this Calibre plugin auto-removes DRM while you’re importing the book from any DRMed source: https://github.com/noDRM/DeDRM_tools
@afewbugs You might want to take a look at https://www.xteink.com/products/xteink-x4
Tiny (smaller than a phone), cheap and completely open. It is so small it is very pocketable, which is great for always having it with you. There is an alternate firmware called Crosspoibt for it that is excellent.
@afewbugs Do you have the books downloaded on something / somewhere already? If so, it’s a pretty simple import into Calibre with the deDRM plugin. At that point you can put or keep them on your permanently-airplane-mode kindle (to avoid Amazon screwing with it more), or get fancy and jailbreak the kindle (more effort but definitely possible). But the kindle should be able to keep working with something like Calibre putting the books on it. No immediate need to get a new reader unless you want to.
If the books aren’t already downloaded somewhere, that’s the first step and I’m not sure how to get around that these days.
@afewbugs I’ll add I bought an old kindle specifically to do this with, and while I jailbroke it for funsies, I didn’t need to for the calibre route to work.
I tried KO reader and found it absolutely unusable without a touchscreen and worse than the native kindle software. So I just read things using the native software and load the device via usb. Once jailbroken there’s a way to load it via WiFi but it just wasn’t worth the setup to me.