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#16 |
Running with scissors
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Some people, i.e., the non-tech savvy, consider using anything on a phone (or tablet) as being online. An understandable confusion when they're completely clueless about how these things work. And now with "the cloud" the distinction is even blurrier.
Last edited by hobnail; 08-10-2020 at 01:39 PM. |
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#17 | |
Resident Curmudgeon
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Quote:
Overdrive Read needs a web browser. You can use the Hoopla app to read online. But most of the time it's using a web browser. Overdrive (for example) has the ability to read eBooks online. but again, it's using a web browser. You might be able to use the Overdrive or Libby apps. But I still say a web browser is the #1 program used for online reading. |
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#18 |
Resident Curmudgeon
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Well, just because they've got it wrong doesn't make web browser any less the most used for online reading.
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#19 |
Diligent dilettante
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Location: in my mind
Device: Kobo Sage; Kobo Libra Colour
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Some non-tech savvy people are also apparently unaware that Edge (a) hasn't offered epub reading for quite some time and (b) has a minuscule market share, making it vanishingly unlikely to be the primary way ebooks are read "online".
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#20 |
Karma Kameleon
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Device: iPad Mini, iPhone X, Kindle Fire Tab HD 8, Walmart Onn
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My favorite Android book reader is FBReader. It ticks all my "must have's" and has the added bonus of working on iPhone/iPads and Androids and syncing across systems.
- Easy to adjust lighting by dragging finger up and down the side - Can set the forward/back targets. Top, Middle, Bottom of each side are configurable - Handles Series - Easy to load books via the FBNetwork (uses goggle drive) - Configurable screen colors - Night mode (also configurable) If I'm lazy, I just read a book via the Amazon app (I buy almost all my ebooks from Amazon). But most of the time, I'll liberate the books, convert to epub and read them via FBReader. |
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#21 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Location: 26 kly from Sgr A*
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Quote:
I've tried it using the XBOX browser and it works great. A fine way to read why peddaling on an exercise bike or walking on a treadmill. https://www.amazon.com/gp/help/custo...QEMKHLBENNKWU2 Kobo used to have a cloud reader, too but I haven't heard if it's still working. Beyond that a lot of universities store their ebook content as web-only HTML so you are probably right that browsers are *among* the most popular apps for reading ebooks. Some publishers offer online reading as an option (BAEJ, for one) and outside the US a lot of small publishers offer web-only ebooks. People need to remember there tons of non-commercial ebooks out there and there is ebook life outside the commercial gardens. |
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#22 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
Some are even unaware that new Edge runs on Android and has over 10M happy users on android after just a few monthsm Check the reviews at Google. https://play.google.com/store/apps/d....emmx&hl=en_US It also has a 6% share on Windows after barely a couple of months. This is on top of old Edge, which hasn't been EOL'ed yet, and (sigh) Internet Explorer. Seriously. It's been a while but there's a browser arms race again: https://www.businessinsider.com/micr...0for%20hogging. https://www.laptopmag.com/news/googl...rowser-is-best As to the OP, both Edge and Chrome accept the same plugins, so both browsers *can* be used for offline reading of DRM-free ePubs. https://chrome.google.com/webstore/d...gkeebkbiadflb/ Last edited by fjtorres; 08-18-2020 at 12:35 PM. |
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#23 |
Cheese Whiz
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Location: Springfield, Illinois
Device: Kindle PW, Samsung Tab A 10.1(2019), Pixel 6a.
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I have used Aldiko, and have Moon reader pro for my ePub books, which I like very much. But in the USA, for casual readers, I think the Amazon Kindle Reader for Android is hard to beat.
With the Kindle infrastructure, you not only can read on virtually any device (and sync among the devices), but you have the optional Kindle unlimited service (which I love. Oops, not to mention the smaller Amazon Prime version, whatever it's called). And I suspect there are more quality free ebooks available for download in that environment than any other. Certainly, it seems that way to my casual observation. |
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#24 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
https://www.amazon.com/kindle-dbs/fd/nonprime-pr Prime subscribers also get a free book (out of 8 choices) every month. Every one a guaranteed best seller. ![]() |
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#25 |
Groupie
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Device: Ipad Mini, Kindle PW5, Libra 2
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As others have said, I doubt that you want to do a ton of reading books actually 'online' in a browser--but you sure can if you choose to.
Here are three common, easy-to-access options for reading 'online' books in your browser (there are many more): * If you buy Amazon Kindle ebooks--you can read them in their 'cloud reader' (browser) * If you buy Google Play ebooks--you can read them in your browser * If you read free ebooks at Gutenberg.org--you can read them in your browser Since you run Android, you probably want to download an app like one of the following examples that I'd recommend to read ebooks on your device: * Amazon Kindle app: For Amazon-purchased ebooks * Kobo app: For ebooks you purchase at Kobo, probably one of the best ebook stores that's an alternative to Amazon. * Readera app: A free, very lightweight Android ebook reader that can read ebooks in many of the popular formats (you'd use this app for 'free' ebooks or any that have had the encryption removed) After you get used to working with ebooks, you'll want to learn to use a free, open source software app called Calibre to manage the ebooks in your library, convert them to other formats, etc. For example, I use Calibre to remove the encryption from all the ebooks I purchase, not to do anything illegal, but simply so that I can convert the books I have bought to other formats and read them on any device that I choose. After you get used to working with ebooks and choose a favorite ebook store, Calibre will be a really useful tool to do things like buy books from other places, convert them all to a single common format such as epub, and read them all on your favorite device and your favorite reading app. |
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#26 |
Resident Curmudgeon
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You are still using your web browser. It's not Kindle Cloud Reader that is displaying your eBooks on your screen. Is there any program that will display an eBook that's online? This does not include mapping online storage to a drive letter and then using a program like you would locally.
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#27 | |
Resident Curmudgeon
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Quote:
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#28 |
Still reading
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Probably only by pretending to. PDF plugins for Browsers DO NOT read online like a web page is read. It's actually temporarily downloaded.
Really only actual web pages are online. Google Books previews are generating web pages as is the Amazon "look inside". I don't know how the earlier version of Edge that did epubs worked. It likely tried to load the entire ebook into RAM. Sometimes feasible for PDFs. Anyway that's gone. Edge is now a skin on the Chromium Engine which while in theory open source is really controlled by Google for Chrome. |
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#29 |
Member
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Indeed, your choice of an app for reading ebooks depends on many factors, some of which are mentioned above.
E.g., the language you prefer reading books, your book shopping/borrowing habits (Amazon, Gutenberg, Archive.org, Libgen, etc.), format of books, even your country of residence, however strange this might sound... For years, my all-time favourite has been Moon+ Reader Pro. It can read almost all well-known book formats, including FB2 (which is very simple structurally, yet widely used in publications in my part of the world, although I sometimes prefer the eye-candiness of EPUBs too). Recently, after I encountered a few problems described in another post, I tried Pocketbook Reader as well. I can say that it is as powerful as Moon+ Reader, but in some aspects even exceeds it (e.g., it didn't cause the problems I ran into in Moon Reader, and you can use it for listening to audiobooks too). For reading on my desktop computer and to view and test the way my own creations look on the screen, I use Calibre Viewer, which is part of a bigger suit called Calibre, and Kindle Previewer! Last edited by simurq; 08-28-2020 at 01:42 PM. |
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#30 |
Resident Curmudgeon
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Why are some of you taking about different eBook programs when there isn't one that will display online eBooks?
It's a web browser you need to use. So the answer is a we browser is the most popular program for reading eBooks that are online. |
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