Quote:
Originally Posted by Kaitlyn2004
I've got a new Kobo Glo and am playing around with one of the few eBooks I already have, which is a PDF ("Agile Product Management with Scrum")
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PDF is designed as a final/output format... it is absolutely atrocious as an input/middleman format.
Sounds to me like this is quite a technical book, with lots of figures/diagrams/other fancy typography (probably a bunch of sidebars, information boxes, formulas, etc. etc.), which is probably up there for some of THE WORST material to convert into EPUB without the original source documents.
You might be able to use k2pdfopt in order to chop the margins from the PDF, which might make the PDF fit slightly better on a smaller screen:
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...d.php?t=144711
If the company doesn't sell an EPUB version, and only gives out a PDF, you sadly might just be forced into reading this book on a larger screen (large tablet, monitor, etc. etc.).
It is just physically impossible to fit a book designed for 7"x10" or 8.5"x11" on a tinier screen. (Hence, the annoying panning/scanning you are doing).
Side Note: Are you aware of this fantastic introduction/presentation, "Agile Product Ownership in a Nutshell"?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=502ILHjX9EE
I went to a lecture/presentation on Agile Development a few months ago, and the speaker showed off a portion of that video... it is absolutely fantastic.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kaitlyn2004
I tried using Calbre to convert to epub which seemed to work fine but the formatting is quite screwed up and I wouldn't exactly call it readable.
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Heh....
If you still want to tackle it (I wouldn't recommend tackling such a complex book, especially for someone who never did it before). I wrote quite in depth about it in these topics:
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...d.php?t=223817
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...d.php?t=228413
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...d.php?t=234146
Long story short, you have to run it through OCR (Optical Character Recognition), and LOTS AND LOTS of manual fixing.