Do they use pdf format, or do you have to convert/download a special file type?

Can you browse webpages on them and it renders in digital ink?

I want to read more of the great, freely available content online but I struggle to read on phone or PC (bad screen). Do e-readers help address this?

  • ReadFanon [any, any]@hexbear.net
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    4 days ago

    E-readers are great for a mid-point between phones/laptops and printed word but it comes with caveats:

    • Some devices are walled gardens, avoid those where possible (jailbreaking is possible depending on the device)

    • Some devices don’t sync well across platforms/other devices

    • Text editing (e.g. copy-paste, highlighting, annotation) is not necessarily easy or as feature rich as it should be by this stage

    • They work well with epubs and similar formats (e.g. mobi) but they don’t handle PDFs and comic book formats well, if at all

    If you want an experience that is very book-like, ereaders are pretty great especially if you are aware of their limitations and you’re okay with that.

    I’m not sure about reading websites on an ereader but I’m sure that it’s possible with certain services like Pocket or something similar. You would be able to convert websites to an epub format but I’m not sure if there’s a simple, user-friendly means to do this or if it would take a lot of fiddling around to achieve.

    It’s a real pain converting PDFs to epub format, although I can be lured into the multiple hour-long process of doing this for a PDF with words of encouragement, especially if the book is of particular importance to a broader purpose.

    If you want to get better text editing and annotation options then go for a tablet or laptop. Same goes for reading PDFs and comic books.

    I’d recommend LibGen and Anna’s Archive for pirating ebooks. I’m also pretty handy at tracking down pirated books that aren’t readily available on the mainstream piracy websites like LG/AA and similar sites so if there’s a book that you are trying to get your hands on but you haven’t had any luck then let me know the full title(s) and author(s) and I can go digging in the dark corners of the internet. I can also rip from the internet archive but the majority of their books are in PDF format so it’s probably not as useful to you, although they do have a lot of rare books that are otherwise unavailable.

    • PointAndClique [they/them]@hexbear.netOP
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      4 days ago

      Wow thanks for the breakdown.

      It’s a real pain converting PDFs to epub format, although I can be lured into the multiple hour-long process of doing this for a PDF with words of encouragement, especially if the book is of particular importance to a broader purpose.

      I’m learning now that this isn’t as easy as I thought it would be. I downloaded a stack of PDFs during uni, including prescribed reading (possibly even from LG), and read them on my mum’s old iPad and it was tough. I liked that it was an offline, portable device, but lengthy reading on the screen felt unnatural and tiring. I’d like to go back and read all those papers and publications, and the ones I didn’t get to, without the pressure of writing my own thesis afterwards.

      I’m not worried too much about annotations at this stage now I’ve completed the degree. After that, I’m expecting I’ll mostly reading for pleasure/self-learning, and will probably read 50/50 fiction/non-fiction.

      I’m not sure about reading websites on an ereader but I’m sure that it’s possible with certain services like Pocket or something similar

      That’s fine, reading (mostly text based) websites is definitely a secondary consideration to reading natively-rendered epubs. I make do reading on my phone, but some of the longer treatises on marxists.org and redsails, for example, warrant a bit more focus. Since joining hexbear my theory intake has definitely increased…

      I’m going to go to a big-box store this weekend and check out a Kobo, see if it’s in line with what I’m expecting. A refurb may be an option too (y)

      • ReadFanon [any, any]@hexbear.net
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        4 days ago

        I downloaded a stack of PDFs during uni, including prescribed reading (possibly even from LG), and read them on my mum’s old iPad and it was tough… I’d like to go back and read all those papers and publications, and the ones I didn’t get to, without the pressure of writing my own thesis afterwards.

        If they are works published through mainstream book publishing houses then there’s a very good chance that they are available in epub format as well. Unfortunately, due to the limitations of epubs (kinda, but in truth not really) PDF is the format de jure when it comes to academic publications and epubs are virtually unheard of in this end of publishing, so keep this in mind.

        With regards to converting PDFs to epubs, generally the embedded “virtual” text in a PDF is very sub-par. I’m sure you’ve tried to search a PDF for a key term only for the search to return empty although you know that the PDF contains that word - that’s due to the embedded text being shoddy. Most simple PDF converter tools just extract the embedded text, which is commonly a first pass OCR attempt by an outdated tool so you end up with text like:

        W|0st s1mpie PØFconverl’er tooIs iust extracl the embedoled te>t

        It’s really unwieldy and most of the time it’s so scrappy that you’re better off starting from scratch without it.

        I make do reading on my phone, but some of the longer treatises on marxists.org and redsails, for example, warrant a bit more focus. Since joining hexbear my theory intake has definitely increased…

        I’ve just had a poke around and it’s quite doable to turn a webpage into epub format using the dotepub tool. I’ll try to remember to upload an example of what it produced using zero effort when Catbox.moe comes back online but anyway the epub turned out really well tbh. Edit: Here’s the example file, can be viewed with any ebook reader app. I think with Marxists.org works that span multiple pages using different hyperlinks, it’s going to be a bit messier.

        I’m going to go to a big-box store this weekend and check out a Kobo, see if it’s in line with what I’m expecting. A refurb may be an option too (y)

        Cool!

        See what you can find. We’re near an inflection point in the ereader market, with colour ereaders just recently becoming commercially available and with (relatively) high refresh rates starting to become available. I’m not sure how well the two are integrated but I’d guess pretty poorly right now. I’d hazard a guess that an ereader with a serviceable refresh rate that would make phone-style navigation practical should be only a few years off - at a conservative estimate, 5 years, and at an optimistic estimate under 2. With that in mind opt for something that meets your needs but aim for the cheaper or refurbished end of the market as it would be a bit silly to drop hundreds of dollars on a cutting-edge device that is going to end up deprecated fairly soon imo.

        Final tip: personally I prefer ereaders that have physical buttons to turn pages so that way your screen stays nice and clean.

  • NaN@lemmy.sdf.org
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    5 days ago

    Typically there is a basic browser, it would not be the preferred way to read things.

    They can do pdf but it’s not ideal. PDF is a specific page size, it is better if the text is rendered by the device itself. EPUB is a pretty common format for books (just not on kindle), but there are other formats including plain text. A site like Standard Ebooks has really nice, free content. Lots of libraries have ebooks too.

    E-readers are much better for reading. The battery lasts forever because it is not keeping a display “on” most of the time. On a good one the text is nearly indistinguishable from text on a printed page - but with resizable and changeable fonts. The writing is actually on a physical medium that is repositioned with an electric charge, it’s probably not like any other screen you’re used to.

    • PointAndClique [they/them]@hexbear.netOP
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      5 days ago

      Thank you for the clear and quick response!

      No chance of me buying an Amazon product, so Kindle is off the table in any case.

      Given that ereaders can handle PDF, is it worthwhile finding a way to convert them into EPUB first, or is the output essentially the same?

      • juliebean
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        5 days ago

        if all you have is a pdf, it very likely will not convert nicely to epub without some work on your end. if you’re just trying to view a textual document, like a novel or something, the big advantage of an epub is that it’ll reflow to fit your screen. you can change the font size or style, margins, line spacing, whatever, and its like the book was just printed that way, and you can flip pages naturally. if your pdf has a small font, you’ve got to scroll and zoom and it is a big pain in the butt. pdfs are designed for printing first and foremost, while epubs are meant to be read digitally.

  • VHS [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    5 days ago

    Epub or similar formats like mobi or azw3 are the way to go, most PDFs are laid out for A4 or 8.5"×11" paper and the text will look very small. I’ve gotten most of my ebooks from zlibrary, soulseek is another place that’s worth looking. Converting PDFs to epub is possible if the PDF has text that can be parsed by the computer, but the formatting will likely get fucked up to some degree. If the PDF is purely image-based than it can’t be done.

    For online articles, I would maybe look into the Firefox Pocket integration that Kobo ereaders come with, you can send articles from your phone or PC to your ereader over the internet. I have a Kobo but haven’t tried this yet because I keep mine offline. Most ereaders come with a basic browser but I wouldn’t recommend it for practical use because of the low refresh rate and slow processor.

  • rainn [they/them, she/her]@hexbear.net
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    4 days ago

    I have had both a Kobo and Pocketbook. You can convert anything to .epub with Calibre, and websites you can easily convert and send articles to read with Readeck automatically.