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Old 10-26-2020, 07:00 PM   #6
Jacques Q.
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Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.Jacques Q. once ate a cherry pie in a record 7 seconds.
 
Posts: 109
Karma: 1544
Join Date: Jul 2020
Location: Paris
Device: quite a few Kindles...
Quote:
Originally Posted by DNSB View Post
If you take a look in the Dealing with Kindle for PC/Mac 1.19 and KFX in calibre thread, in message #968, there's a batch file that will start Kindle for PC and disable it's ability to download KFX. Check the message before for that for the genesis of this file.

This is a workaround to 1.29's updated KFX encryption after the previous method was decrypted.
Thanks a lot indeed for this. I did download that file but unfortunately I don't know how to "make it work". Should I run it before opening Kindle for PC 1.29? Does it work with Windows or just Linux?
A step-by-step explanation on how to achieve the expected result would be really great. Else I'll have to stick with 1.24 for now, hoping that it doesn't go the way 1.17 did recently (that is, if you recreate it after getting rid of the bloody "forced" 1.29 update, there is apparently no way it will still recognize your Amazon account/password any more.
Sorry if I sound a bit dumb, but I am not one of the technically gifted...
Jacques Q. is offline   Reply With Quote