Quote:
Originally Posted by GeoffR
It is hard to say for sure without seeing the converted book's html and stylesheet, but my guess is that the problem is caused by Calibre adding the 1.5em indent to the first paragraph during the conversion.
To compare like with like, try converting epub to epub with the same settings and view the converted book with Calibre, that way you will be able to tell if it is really a difference between the H2O and Calibre viewer, or a problem with the conversion.
My experience is that there are many, many things that go wrong during Calibre conversions, so it is best to avoid converting if at all possible. You can use the KoboTouchExtended driver to send the original epub to the device as a KePub instead of converting to KePub within Calibre, as that will avoid the Calibre conversion process.
If you must convert then you will probably need to go through the book and manually edit it to fix up all the problems that the conversion causes.
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Hey, thanks for the help. I wish I could open kepub.epubs in koreader. koreader keeps closing on me when I try to open them. Does koreader support those types of files? They open in nickel.
Maybe I'm converting them wrong. I convert them from epub to kepubs in Calibre, but neither nickel nor koreader can see kepubs. So I have to add .epub after the filename for them to see the files.
As for Kobo Touch Extended Driver, I'm grateful that it exists, but I'd rather not directly sync my Kobo with Calibre. I'm afraid Calibre will mess the device's internals up, and I've seen reports of people getting errors on their Kobos when they sync with Calibre (something about aggressive mounting). Does Kobo Touch Extended Driver fix this?
Thanks!
EDIT: After converting them to kepub from epub again in Calibre and renaming them .kepub.epub, many of the books open but some don't. They also don't open as epubs. Too bad I don't have the original epubs for them anymore.