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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 23rd, 2023

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  • Thank you for the warning and source. I think I had read about this. Personally I use IronFox on Android, but Firefox otherwise.

    Even if we take this at worst case scenario, it is a much lesser evil than Google in my opinion. And they still open source everything (I think?) and as far as I’m aware allow 100% configuration to remove or tweak anything we don’t like one way or another.

    More recently I was also not happy with their introduction of AI crap in the browser which can also be disabled.

    It would be better to be disabled by default and even better not to be present, yes, but well…

    As long as it does not get too out of hand and as long as they keep it open so anyone con remove that crap from forks and/or through configuration… Given our choices, I think they deserve recognition for their work. Even if we don’t agree with everything they do.

    I never donated for them and used Firefox for over 20 years. Even if it goes downhill really fast starting now (Which I hope it won’t, and the future would suddenly turn much bleaker in this regard), I think I should be thankful for 20+ years of good service.

    I never switched away from Firefox except for 2-3 of its forks on Android. And Librewolf as non main browser on pc.

    I’m also keeping an eye on ladybird but not keeping my hopes up yet.

    All that being said, your concerns are valid and I do share them. I just want to reinforce that when all is said and done… No matter what the future looks like…

    They were here for us for at least 20 years.



  • Good write up. I agree with several points

    And it pains me too that everything is damn electron. Can we please go back to writing stuff that doesn’t require that?

    I don’t mind an old style interface. Hell, in many cases I’ll welcome it with open arms. Modern UI is not necessarily better. Both tech wise and also style wise.


  • You purchase the book written 30 years ago. It still is as it was 30 years ago. The writer is dead.

    Tomorrow Amazon decides some terms don’t conform to today’s society and changes the book you already purchased, changes the text. Without the writer’s or anyone else’s permission. Maybe even if the writer is not dead, who knows.

    If you had bought a device you control or the physical book, you’d have kept the original thing you purchased.

    The day after Trump has a Trump moment and decides you should only read the Bible. Amazon removes the book from your device. Maybe you’re refunded, maybe not, but you have no book.

    You cannot read books from open formats with it but only Kindle’s. Possibly you cannot add books to it, only read books purchased from Amazon (I think they still allow you to add books via USB but maybe tomorrow you have a “surprise firmware update”).

    Disclaimer : I don’t know your device, your habits, your values, or how to jailbreak it. I’m not telling you you should jailbreak it.

    I’m giving you arguments for, from now on, try to purchase things that don’t lock you in, that give you as much control as possible, and if you have no such choice, try to limit their ability to control you and / or minimize your risk of losses however you can.

















  • TLDR

    Probably anything will serve, but I would recommend either a Kobo or a Pocketbook for they seem more open (or maybe Onyx, I don’t know this one!). I only ever dabbled with two devices though so I won’t claim I know a lot about the subject. You want to read books with ideally the epub format.

    How to read pirated books

    Download the book, connect the e-reader via USB (maybe can be connected in other ways but wtv), copy and paste file, done. (Or use Calibre to manage your library and not do this “hard” step manually).

    When you open your device, you will find the book there and you can read it. For any practical purposes this is the most straight forward and means it may not matter that much what you choose. This is to say, provided you find the books you want to read somewhere online, you shouldn’t have troubles reading it in an e-reader. This works in all e-readers as far as I know.

    E-book formats

    Kindles used to support less formats, specifically not epub which is a book format. They did support mobi which was a good alternative. I read a while ago that they were going to start supporting epub but no idea if it’s the case or not.

    Epub is the open format that I go for and probably the best and most compatible. You can edit epubs by modifying HTML and CSS actually, if you know how to open them (hint: Calibre). This, to say, I considered supported book formats to be relevant but maybe they’re not a big problem either.

    Edit: Looking at this, it seems that Kindles still don’t support epub. They do support mobi though and like @boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net said, we can convert epub to mobi fairly easily, so it’s not a deal breaker, just one restriction that I would personally not want to bother with.

    Openness/customization (KOReader)

    KOReader is a third-party software that you can install on e-readers to provide a more customizable experience. I’m not going to try to convince you it’s good or not, nor that you should install it. I installed it only a couple of months ago.

    I’m mentioning it first of because you may be interested but also to point out at its installation method in Kindle, Kobo and Pocketbook. (They also have installation method for Android which I’ll leave out because Android, and Cervantes and reMarkable which I’ll leave out because I don’t even know what these are).

    Kindle has to be jailbroken, Kobo seems fairly straightforward with maybe a minor annoyance step and Pocketbook seems straightforward. I have a very old Kindle that I don’t know if it’s supported (didn’t check, cba), and a Pocketbook Touch HD 3. I delayed trying KOReader for a long time because I assumed that it would replace my Pocketbook’s stock software and it serves my purpose well, but on a second glance more recently I realized that the installation steps (copy + paste) didn’t override a single file in my device and KOReader lives side by side as an app in my reader.

    For that reason I would suggest either Kobo or Pocketreader.

    I forgot about Onyx which @neshura@bookwormstory.social mentioned - I only became aware about these recently. I suggest you take a look into this as well, it looks decent but I don’t know anything to comment.

    Models

    I don’t have specific models in mind.

    For my more recent Pocketbook purchase, I wanted something closer to 6-7 inches, 10 is too much and I wanted to have physical buttons to turn pages and not just a touch screen. The button requirement limited my choices heavily. Looking back in hindsight I don’t use these buttons, I don’t need them, but my first device had no touchscreen so… :).

    I didn’t like the position of these buttons on the Kobo Libra 2 or whatever (and maybe it was also too big?), and those were pretty much my concerns.

    My model of the Pocketbook was already an “old” model when I got it. My only concern mildly related to piracy was: Does it support epub? But that’s not a restriction - you can read other formats.