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#1 |
Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: New York
Device: Kindle
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Please check my workflow, thanks!
Hello Everyone,
My goal is to upload 2 or 3 books to amazons ebook catalogue. I did a bunch or reading and after realizing all the complications from different formats, coding, conversions, i decided to try and find a simple streamlined approach. 1) Cut and paste my text into Textwrangler 2) Markup the text using html and created a seperate .css file 3) Import file to Calibre and export to mobi. During this process i add metadata, cover image, and TOC. 4) Preview on my kindle and kindlepreviewer 5) Upload to amazon, uncork champagne The question is whether my workflow is efficient? Are there any redundancies or am i missing important steps to completing a well structured ebook? Are there better tools than Textwrangle and Calibre? Should i be using a more sophisticated html editor? Also, is there any reason to use KindleGen in my process? Any advise on my process, or perhaps sharing your own, would be greatly appreciated. PS I am on a mac running osx Many thanks ![]() N. |
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#2 |
Wizzard
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Karma: 33048258
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Roundworld
Device: Kindle 2 International, Sony PRS-T1, BlackBerry PlayBook, Acer Iconia
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Yes, that looks fine.
I'm also on a Mac and I mostly use just TextWrangler/Smultron (haven't quite gotten the hang of TW's particular regexp flavour yet) and KindleGen, plus the Mobi2Mobi tools to fix the metadata afterwards. Although plenty of people set store by Sigil, which technically produces ePubs but can be used to make files suitable for Mobi conversion. A minor nicety you might want to have if your book is divided into sections is to add an NCX TOC, which will give the reader those flickable chapter marks in the progress bar. Although this might already be handled by the Calibre conversion. For what it's worth, KindleGen on the -c2 setting tends to have tighter compression than Calibre usually does, provided you use the Kindlestrip script afterwards. If file size is an issue (I've heard Amazon charges the publisher extra for the transfer over certain sizes), then it might make a difference. My personal workflow was posted some months ago in this thread here, if you're morbidly curious. Mind you, I use it purely to fix existing books I've acquired that have something annoyingly wrong with them, rather than to create distribution-quality works. |
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#3 | ||||
Member
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Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: New York
Device: Kindle
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Quote:
I actually did familiarize myself with Sigil, and while it's an a fantastic app, i think it creates an unnecessary step. Going from html/css=>epub=>mobi is an additional step with potential additional distrortion in code etc. By cutting Sigil out i can do html/css=>Mobi . . . i'm guessing its cleaner, but i could be wrong. Quote:
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#4 | ||
Wizzard
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Karma: 33048258
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Roundworld
Device: Kindle 2 International, Sony PRS-T1, BlackBerry PlayBook, Acer Iconia
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It doesn't take forever to load on my mini Mac?
![]() Actually, I think there is, since it's specifically targeted at manipulating Mobi metadata and Calibre seems to have fairly generic standard fields for stuff. But most of it will be for things you'll likely never use. Quote:
The simple level of HTML that Mobi uses will work just fine within an ePub package, although the same may not be true in reverse, because ePubs allow for much more complex display and greater formatting niceties. But as long as you keep your code clean and stick to that common denominator in your formatting, you'll have books that work very well as both as assembled ePub and generated Mobi. Actually, KindleGen is really, really buggy. But it's Amazon's officially supplied tool for a format that's not open or well-documented at all and the Calibre and Mobi2Mobi people had to reverse-engineer to get their own conversions working. So there's a possibility that a Calibre or other conversion will be missing some small significant thing which will cause problems when being processed by Amazon or displaying on a Kindle. Quote:
Incidentally, if you want to avoid command-line use, there's a nifty AppleScript wrapper that one of our MR members wrote up for KindleGen. I don't use it myself, but it's supposed to be pretty good, and preset to the most useful command-line options. You can also drag and drop ePub files onto Kindle Previewer which will auto-generate mobi files. But these will be larger (compressed at the -c1 option) and sometimes it chokes on certain code (to be fair, it chokes on the exact same code that KindleGen does, since it seems to be using KG for the conversion anyway). Anyway, good luck with it all, and if you have any further questions, please don't hesitate to ask. |
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#5 |
Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: New York
Device: Kindle
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ATDrake,
Thanks a millions!!!! I will certainly have more questions, but i'm first gonna read up on mobi2mobi and those scripts. Best, N |
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#6 | |
Enquiring Mind
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: London, UK
Device: Kindle 3 (WiFi)
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Hi NicolaNY
Something you need to be aware of, which was brought to my attention a while ago by Hitch, another (extremely knowledgeable) poster here on the MobileRead forums : Quote:
If the above applies, you really need to use Kindlegen to create the final MOBI version that you upload to Amazon. Note: the quote above dates from Nov 2010, but to the best of my knowledge, the info it contains is still accurate. |
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#7 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD
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I've found that Kindlegen is pretty "hit or miss" when translating the css from my epubs to the standard in-line html formatting needed for mobi's. I constantly experiment to determine exactly what works and what doesn't, but it's pretty hard to nail down.
Calibre, however, usually does a better job of translating what I intended with my css (I'm sure I get too carried away with my styling). But I want the final product to be generated by Amazon's official tool for ensured compatibility. My solution? Build an ePub. Convert with Calibre (epub->mobi)... unpack that mobi with MobiUnpack->MobiML2Html... manually create the toc.ncx (and twiddle the opf) and then feed that opf (and html) to Kindlegen. Strip the resulting mobi with MobiStrip. And finally, tweak the metadata with Mobi2Mobi. It's convoluted, but I've found that my mobi's converted from epubs tend to more accurately retain the original formatting I've worked so hard on. Last edited by DiapDealer; 03-31-2011 at 12:23 PM. |
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#8 | |
Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: New York
Device: Kindle
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Quote:
Yea, hitch is helping me out in another thread, very smart, helpful member. Thanks for your advice, i will be testing a bit more with kindlegen/kindlepreviewer. Hopefully i'll figure it out because its important to me that the book is saleable on all kindle platforms. Very much appreciate the advice. |
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#9 | |
Member
![]() Posts: 12
Karma: 10
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: New York
Device: Kindle
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Quote:
Diapdealer, thanks for your input. Interestingly, i initially wanted to do html/css->epub->.mobi using Textwrangler->Sigil->Calibre, but i thought the extra step of ePub/Sigil could create coding problems. I guess i was wrong and will have to look into this again, perhaps using kindlegen/previewer instead of Calibre. Very interesting. You own process does seem complicated, but if it gives you exactly what you want then obviously it's well worth it. Gonna give all of this a try, hope you don't mind some questions later on, i promise to research before i ask. |
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Tags |
amazon, kindle, kindlepreviewer, mobi, workflow |
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