Please, also look at Nook reading-device - Kindle is not the only device around. I just found it so now using iPad/iPhone instead of Kindle! Then again if you don't need to read technical material, Kindle can be very good-reading device particularly to your eyes. You can syncronize all of your course material from iTunes to other iDevices. The trick is not to convert the PDF but keep them as PDF or convert DjVU into PDFs after OCR-addition with tools such as ABBYY or Adobe Acrobat Pro. I suggest to search over things such as because it is the tool used to display Mathematics for example in Stackexchange.ĭoing technical material into eBook format is pretty hard. There may be some good conversion from PDF to HTML. Now this is of course different if you use iPad's Kindle but still the conversion is the key problem. Even the bought books covering technical areas can look awful in Kindle or very impractical because of low screen-updating. Here are several different ways to convert and read PDFs on a Kindle. But reading PDFs on a Kindle requires a little help. This is because technical writing with mathematical formulae look awful after the conversion from PDF to, let say, to Kindle format or HTML. Amazons Kindle (or Kindle app) supports not only ebooks, but also PDFs. Reading technical material on Kindle pretty much requires the books bought as Kindle format.
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