|  02-27-2019, 12:22 PM | #31 | 
| Guru            Posts: 685 Karma: 11431990 Join Date: Jul 2015 Location: Toronto, Canada Device: Kobo Sage - Kindle PW5 & Voyage - iPad Pro M1 12.9 | 
			
			That's a pretty impressive example! You use the integrated keyboard?
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|  02-27-2019, 04:44 PM | #32 | 
| Connoisseur  Posts: 54 Karma: 10 Join Date: Dec 2013 Device: Kindle Paperwhite 3G | 
			
			Does jailbreaking mean you no longer get firmware updates from Amazon? If so, are there any other downsides? You can't "unjailbreak" a Kindle, can you? | 
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|  02-27-2019, 04:51 PM | #33 | |
| hopeless n00b            Posts: 5,126 Karma: 19597086 Join Date: Jan 2009 Location: in the middle of nowhere Device: PW4, PW3, Libra H2O, iPad 10.5, iPad 11, iPad 12.9 | Quote: 
 No downsides. The jailbreak itself is a tiny 272 byte key file. All it does is allow non-Amazon/unofficial stuff to run. factory reset followed by firmware install = jailbreak gone | |
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|  02-27-2019, 04:54 PM | #34 | 
| Connoisseur  Posts: 54 Karma: 10 Join Date: Dec 2013 Device: Kindle Paperwhite 3G | 
			
			Is there a way, other than having wifi always off, to prevent automatic updates? I understand the Kindle for PC has an option for this, but not sure about the Kindle ereaders.
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|  02-27-2019, 04:58 PM | #35 | |
| hopeless n00b            Posts: 5,126 Karma: 19597086 Join Date: Jan 2009 Location: in the middle of nowhere Device: PW4, PW3, Libra H2O, iPad 10.5, iPad 11, iPad 12.9 | Quote: 
 Mind, it seems the presence of that folder by itself has caused extremely poor battery life on the PW4. There's a KUAL helper add-on that creates an additional file to alleviate the problem. | |
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|  02-27-2019, 06:58 PM | #36 | 
| Guru            Posts: 685 Karma: 11431990 Join Date: Jul 2015 Location: Toronto, Canada Device: Kobo Sage - Kindle PW5 & Voyage - iPad Pro M1 12.9 | 
			
			May I ask you which helper I need to install to prevent my battery to drain?
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|  02-27-2019, 08:05 PM | #37 | |
| hopeless n00b            Posts: 5,126 Karma: 19597086 Join Date: Jan 2009 Location: in the middle of nowhere Device: PW4, PW3, Libra H2O, iPad 10.5, iPad 11, iPad 12.9 | Quote: 
 https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sh...d.php?t=225030 Prevent OTA update (or something to that effect). | |
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|  02-27-2019, 08:20 PM | #38 | 
| Guru            Posts: 685 Karma: 11431990 Join Date: Jul 2015 Location: Toronto, Canada Device: Kobo Sage - Kindle PW5 & Voyage - iPad Pro M1 12.9 | 
			
			Awesome, thank you. It's the helper one.
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|  02-27-2019, 08:27 PM | #39 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,221 Karma: 8381518 Join Date: Oct 2009 Location: Oaxaca, Mexico Device: Paperwhite 4 X 2 | |
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|  02-27-2019, 09:52 PM | #40 | |
| Going Viral            Posts: 17,212 Karma: 18210809 Join Date: Feb 2012 Location: Central Texas Device: No K1, PW2, KV, KOA | 
			
			 The thread title does not require that I state ALL of my reasons. Maybe this says it better than I did: Quote: 
 The emphasis behind keeping owner control of the device's behavior has much more than pure personal preference, it also includes aspects not yet (in the USA) settled in law. Who has control of a device that is purchased rather than rented or leased is clear. A rental or lease does not transfer ownership rights (unless specially contracted as such). A purchased device does transfer ownership rights. The open question is: "Does that also transfer control of the device behavior to the new owner or does control of the device behavior remain with the seller?" I, and as far as I know, the other people behind "jail breaking" the Kindle are on the owner's side of this war with Amazon. That is, to give the owner control of its behavior. Keep in mind Amazon's original reason for producing the Kindle and selling it at such a low price; It was (and still is) a market research tool. (You can find that described in the "Legal" documentation that comes with the firmware series 2 devices and newer models.) Take this example: You are the owner/operator of a brick and mortar bookstore. You put what you think will be most popular with passer's by in the window to attract buyers. But you have no way to tell exactly what that population that passes your store is really interested in. Obviously, if you could hit everyone's most wanted publications, your sales would be at a maximum for that population. So the Kindle was designed to gather and report back various aspects of the user's preference. To keep that information most relevant, they retain the right to control the device's behavior (forced installing of changed firmware without the owner's consent). I don't like a major corporation looking over my shoulder at how I use a device that does "hidden" data collection of my use of the device which is now mine by right of purchase. Not any more than I like Amazon/Lab126/Jeff B. subscribing to every post I make at this site. But I don't have a way to control that (no access to the site software). Hey, you asked for it, there it is. | |
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|  02-28-2019, 08:33 AM | #41 | 
| Enthusiast            Posts: 35 Karma: 10232 Join Date: Nov 2010 Device: G090G1 5.9.7 G090G1 5.10.2 | 
			
			Kinda off-topic but not.  I agree 100% with everything knc1 said.  The basic principle of "I bought it so I own it and control it" is a war that's been going on for 20 years now - a David v Goliath war in multiple industries.  Phones, Kindles, gaming consoles, computers, radios, tractors, cars...and we've been losing since the DMCA passed.  However, there is good news! Right to repair legislation across numerous states has been proposed, but again, it's grassroots vs Microsoft, Amazon, John Deere, Apple, Cisco, etc. A few weeks ago, All State insurance bought Icracked, a huge 3rd party phone repair chain. All State has said they are going to loan out their lobbyists to weigh in on the side of us now, if you can believe it. I have great hopes for 2019/2020 in this area. | 
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|  02-28-2019, 04:55 PM | #42 | 
| Going Viral            Posts: 17,212 Karma: 18210809 Join Date: Feb 2012 Location: Central Texas Device: No K1, PW2, KV, KOA | 
			
			A few independent minded Kindle developers vs the richest man in the world (140 Billion dollars). It does seem a little one sided at times. | 
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|  03-10-2019, 07:10 PM | #43 | 
| Connoisseur            Posts: 59 Karma: 14210 Join Date: Jul 2015 Device: none | 
			
			Except it still doesn’t have an “add note” annotation feature which the stock reader has. Very useful for some people.
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|  03-12-2019, 03:36 AM | #44 | 
| Groupie            Posts: 168 Karma: 100329 Join Date: Apr 2017 Location: Leipzig/Germany Device: PW3, KT3 (fw 5.8.11 with jb) | 
			
			I agree with knc1's long statement above. I'm using my Kindles just as a hardware platform to read free ebooks (mainly classics from Project Gutenberg and (translations of) Greek and Latin ancient texts). Most of them are in epub format; but interestingly I still have some very old prc files from my very first ebook reader: a Palm Pilot (bought exactly 20 years ago, and it's still working...  Why reformat them, as long they are still natively supported?!? Though I have an Amazon account (to buy e.g. DVDs and tools, etc.), I've never ever bought an ebook from them. And yes, I even never had connected my Kindles to the Internet at all. Just pulled them out of their boxes, created the update blocker dir (just to make completely sure...) and then did the jb procedures (the update to a more current Amazon basic fw - I still prefer v5.8.11 for various reasons! - was made via side loaded *.bin files, not online of course). My "everyday's burner" for reading is, BTW, Vlasovsoft's CoolReader, because this reader is highly configurable, especially the margins and tap zones; and the feature I like most is the cool and also highly configurable status line on top of the page (in my opinion much, much better than the rudimentary status info in the bottom of the screen in Amazon's firmware, as it also displays the time and battery percentage). I also tested KOReader, but didn't like it. Too bloated. To difficult to configure. This is mainly because I don't have any PDF books that could take advantage of KOReader's really very good PDF reflow feature - my PDF files are just scanned(!) books, i.e. bitmap files; and for them, interestingly, the Kindle original firmware is the best to read (especially because of the contrast setting feature). Another feature I like very much in Vlasovsoft's CoolReader are the user defined sleep/screensaver files. As my epubs often don't have a proper cover picture in them, I even wouldn't like them to be used as sleep screen. I'm very often travelling by train, and it's of no interest for other passengers around me to know what I'm actually reading. So I have some mere generic 16 color grayscale pictures of my personal choice, being randomly used as screen savers. This is in my opinion one of the most fascinating features of CoolReader.  Without the possibility to jailbreak, I'd never buy a Kindle. | 
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|  04-06-2019, 11:15 AM | #45 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 5,837 Karma: 105490889 Join Date: Apr 2011 Device: pb360 | Quote: 
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| Tags | 
| 2019, chocolatine, jailbreak, reasons, text, why jailbreak | 
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