Quote:
Originally Posted by HarryT
Ok, but there are plenty of other eInk devices out there, many of which allow you to install enormously more capable web browsers than the rather quirky browser that the Kindle has.
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Or run the connection through a proxy that "fixes" things so that the Kindle displays it properly.
Note: The Kindle will render an HTML file if the filename ends with the extension: .txt
Some of Amazon's diagnostics use that feature.
I also wrote a worked example in my "CPU Report" add-in.
But whatever -
I and Harry T. are responding in the same spirit (rare here) -
Running an extremely old firmware on a stock Kindle is not the real answer that you need.