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#1 |
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![]() Posts: 15
Karma: 12
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Chicago, IL
Device: Kindle 2
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Converting PDFs to images (Linux only)
I haven't tried PDFRead yet (just found out about that), but perhaps this is a useful alternative. Would be great to hear from somebody about how this compares to reading a PRC file created by PDFRead in landscape mode. In portrait the text is just too small on the Kindle.
Here is my original post from the Amazon forum: So, thanks to igorsk, we know that the Kindle will display a folder of images in the same way as an ebook. Here's a procedure for converting even book-length PDF files to a folder of png images that are formatted for the Kindle. This method uses a tool (xcf2png) that I couldn't get to compile in Windows, so you will need to have Linux installed to do this. Please don't reply asking for a Windows equivalent; unfortunately I won't be able to help you with that. MacOS could possibly work. First we convert the PDF to an XCF file with a layer for each page (this part requires a lot of RAM): 1. Open the pdf file in GIMP 2. Click Select All 3. Open Pages as: Layers 4. Width: 800 pixels 5. Image | Mode | Grayscale 6. Save the file with a .xcf extension Now we need to download and compile xcftools. You will need to have the libpng development package for your distribution installed. On Ubuntu, you would do: sudo apt-get install gcc make libpng12-dev 1. wget http://henning.makholm.net/xcftools/...s-1.0.4.tar.gz 2. tar zxvf xcftools-1.0.4.tar.gz 3. cd xcftools-1.0.4 4. ./configure --prefix=/usr 5. make && sudo make install (Or, on Debian/Ubuntu, just do: sudo apt-get install xcftools) Now we can convert the XCF to PNGs: f=Your\ Filename\ Here.xcf ; i=1 ; d=`echo $f | sed 's/\.xcf//'` ; mkdir "$d" ; for n in `xcfinfo "$f" | sed '1d;s/.* //'` ; do j=`printf %03d $i` ; xcf2png -g -o "$d/${d}_${j}.png" "$f" "$n" ; i=$(($i+1)) ; done This will make a directory with the same name as the XCF file and put the images in there. If you haven't already, create a directory called 'pictures' in the root of your Kindle's storage. Copy the directory with all the PNGs that you just made into 'pictures'. Now you can press Alt-z from "Home" and this directory should show up as a book. Go to it and then bring up the menu. I'm using the following settings: rotate to landscape, dithering disabled, actual size enabled, fit to width and fit to height both disabled, pan to next page enabled. I would like to enable full screen also, but it appears to be incompatible with panning. I found the landscape mode to be necessary in order for the print to be large enough to read comfortably (Jeff Bezos, don't worry: with a bit of practice you can still read with one hand!). If you don't like reading this way, just use a width of 600 instead of 800 when you open the PDF in gimp. |
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#2 |
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![]() Posts: 15
Karma: 12
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Chicago, IL
Device: Kindle 2
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I had a chance to try PDFRead- see this post:
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...327#post373327 |
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