Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
22. I have plenty of e-books on my Kindle (some in the cloud and some in local only) and I created many Collections to classify my books. One silly things I tried first time was to create a folder hierarchy in my computer and when I transfer the root folder in the Kindle, it was flatten; In fact I learn after the Collections are not equivalent ...
The documented way is to use the Kindle PC app and download the book inside that. The file will end up on your PC and only readable in the Kindle. The current versions download the book as a .kfx file that allows Kindle apps to do more with the data. Older versions downloaded the file as a .azw file. The USB option does need Kindle hardware.
However, from my kindle device if I look at my "Cloud" items, then in the overall menu there is a "Import collections" which lets me import collections from my desktop software. The desktop software has an "import collections" command available from the "add collection" menu in the ui, but I'm not sure where it imports from.
By default, the books are saved in this folder: C:\Users\YOURUSERNAME\AppData\Local\Amazon\Kindle\application\content. Replace YOURUSERNAME with your Windows username. Typically, you will have two files per book: a .apnx and a .azw. Backup both of them. You may want to consider an automated backup service to backup these and your other files.
Sorted by: 2. After adding your new PC to your Amazon account as a Kindle device, and after downloading Kindle software onto your new PC, then open the Kindle program, and choose Collections, click the plus sign, and choose Import Collections. Share. Improve this answer.
Vidit Shah. 31 1 2. may be issue with the filename given and listed by kindle. check the difference - what name do you get if you import the book to calibre check with that name. or embed correct metadata via calibre. the problem will be solved. – v_sukt.
171 10. Add a comment. If you're using Calibre, switch to your "Device": Select the books that are not in your Calibre library (i.e., the ones without the check mark), right-click and then click "Add books to library": That's particularly useful if you have some books on Kindle that you didn't have in your library, thus you don't have to check ...
2. Yes, you can use a Kindle (at least Kindles that are several years old) without an Amazon account. I got a secondhand Kindle that is probably ~4-5 years old. I connected to wifi to deregister the prior owner. Then I turned wifi off, and connected to my pc with a microUSB cable and uploaded books using Calibre.
What happened yesterday was different. I tried to move mobi ebooks to my kindle. The books were transferred fine, I can see them on my kindle drive on the computer. The problem was when I opened my Kindle to arrange the books I transferred, they weren't there. I tried reconnecting my kindle to the computer and the books are still there.
Although you cannot stream from any Kindle directly (except for the Kindle Fire HD), you can download any of your Kindle books to a PC or laptop and read them using the PC Kindle App, and you would be able to stream that. You can stream directly from the Kindle Fire HD via HDMI. But this answer is correct for the other models, including the ...