A High-calibre Upgrade Bonus

Fedora 11 includes an upgrade to python 2.6. This is a good thing: I can now install the latest, greatest calibre. calibre is a tool for managing e-book libraries, and is the descendant of the libprs500 software suite, which I used with success on the Sony e-reader.

With the Sony, I would have been totally in the weeds without libprs500. There was no way short of using a Windows computer to get one’s own content onto the device. libprs500 kept my Windows-free streak alive. After getting my Kindle, I thought the libprs/calibre tools wouldn’t be needed any longer, since the Kindle shows up as yet another USB storage device.

I had a previous version of calibre installed, pre Fedora upgrade. It is much more robust than the libprs500, and the graphical interface is much neater and cleaner.

After sending several PDFs and other documents to Amazon’s conversion service, I have not been overly impressed with the quality and readability of the converted items. libprs/calibre’s MOBI conversions are typically much better than anything else I’ve tried.

So, with part of the Kindle allure being the possibility of having a lot of sysadmin manuals on one easy-to-use device, I’m back on the calibre bandwagon.

I always install calibre from source on my Fedora systems; there are a lot of dependencies to install for calibre to work. I use the time tested method of build, install, run, let stuff blow up as missing dependencies are found, install missing dependencies. Repeat process until everything comes up cleanly.

Maybe I’ll take a shot at making a Fedora RPM for calibre, if for no other reason than to be ready for the next upgrade to Fedora.

-k-

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Not Kindled

Over the last few days, I’ve read a lot of oohs and ahhs about the Amazon Kindle e-book reader. The usual shiny new gadget crowd is blogging up a storm about the device. I have a narrowly defined interest in e-book readers, and I’ll bat out a post about what I’m looking for later over this long weekend. This post from Mark Pilgrim popped up in the feed reader the other day; with my new interest in such devices, I decided to quote a liberal chunk of Mark’s post; I emboldened the parts that are links in Mark’s original:

When someone buys a book, they are also buying the right to resell that book, to loan it out, or to even give it away if they want. Everyone understands this.

Jeff Bezos, Open letter to Author’s Guild, 2002

You may not sell, rent, lease, distribute, broadcast, sublicense or otherwise assign any rights to the Digital Content or any portion of it to any third party, and you may not remove any proprietary notices or labels on the Digital Content. In addition, you may not, and you will not encourage, assist or authorize any other person to, bypass, modify, defeat or circumvent security features that protect the Digital Content.

Amazon, Kindle Terms of Service, 2007

This alone rules out the Kindle in my estimation. Mark’s post is exactly on target; read the whole thing.

-k-
[stags]ebooks, Kindle[/stags]

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