Input Formats: CBZ, CBR, CBC, CHM, EPUB, FB2, HTML, LIT, LRF, MOBI, ODT, PDF, PRC**, PDB, PML, RB, RTF, TCR, TXT And it's GOOD that the book will be available on your home screen that's where all of your other books are kept. It will still show up on your Kindle by its proper book title. "pg#" is just the Project Gutenberg internal title of the book.
HOW TO BOOKMARK A WEBSITE ON KINDLE FIRE DOWNLOAD
(There are also HTML, EPUB, and TXT available, usually.) Your Kindle will show you a scary message, saying "Do you really want to download pg#.mobi? It will be available on your Home screen." Don't worry. Select a book, scroll downwards (using the "next page" button allows you to scroll quickly), and select the "Kindle" version. You can search or browse by author, title, subject, release date, or popularity, and download Kindle books with or without images included. Virtually all mobile-optimized web sites look terrific on the Kindle's web browser, and Project Gutenberg's is no different. Just fire up your Kindle's web browser and go to m. (There are many features you wouldn't even think to ask about.)Īt TeleRead, Kindle World blogger Andrys Basten points out that Project Gutenberg actually has a mobile version of its website where you can download Kindle-compatible e-books directly. Most of these questions I've actually been asked (some of them frequently) others are rhetorical. For organizational purposes, I'm going to do it as a Q&A. Here I want to gather up knowledge generated from and circulated by many of my favorite e-reader blogs, just to try to give you an inkling of all the things that a new Kindle can do. The Kindle suffers from two things: 1) it's never going to do everything that a full-fledged computer or even a color touchscreen tablet can do and 2) the Kindle 3 has improved on a whole slew of features that were either poorly implemented in or entirely absent from earlier iterations of the Kindle. I was actually surprised when I bought my Kindle not just by how much it could do, but by how well it did it. I usually wind up in conversations where someone says "I'd like to try a Kindle, but it can't _." Usually, it can. Amazon's Kindle can do a lot more than just buy and read Amazon-sold e-books.