Searching for eBook reader solution
from ray@lemmy.ml to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 00:29
https://lemmy.ml/post/39848040

cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/39848038

I bought myself a fancy new TLC 11 Nxtpaper Gen 2 with a cool e-ink type display. It’s an android tablet and I’m breaking free from Apple. That means no more Apple Books for my epubs. That also means, I’m now looking for a good solution to annotating epubs/pdfs (mostly highlights) on Android. I’d loveeee it it had some bring your own storage sync (webdav) or just plays well with the local storage for using syncthing etc. What are the best options?

#selfhosted

threaded - newest

taaz@biglemmowski.win on 04 Dec 00:55 next collapse

before getting a pocketbook I was using ReadEra and it worked alright (for basic reading)

ray@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 01:25 collapse

Does the pocketbook app/device let you annotate books? It seems quite interesting but not generally available in the US. Read era does look interesting though.

Kio@ani.social on 04 Dec 01:02 next collapse

Try Readest? I have used it for some time and it works great.

solrize@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 01:10 next collapse

If anyone was wondering: www.tcl.com/us/en/products/…/nxtpaper-11-gen2

11 inch display with 60 hz refresh, but it sounds like regular lcd rather than e-ink? It has an 8000mah battery that it says can run the tablet through a full day, so that’s nothing like an epaper tablet. It sounds more like a drawing tablet, as it has a pressure sensitive pen.

Anyway, I’ve been using Librera FD for reading epubs on Android. Its blurb mentions annotations but I’ve never tried that feature.

I have an Inkplate 10 e-paper tablet but haven’t been using it.

ray@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 01:27 next collapse

I’m not that techy on the screens front but it’s not totally a regular lcd but not as good as e-ink either. It’s kinda something in between. I’ve only gotten to play with it a for a few minutes so far but it’s hard to describe. These pictures do it some justice though: androidcentral.com/…/tcl-nxtpaper-4-fixes-one-of-…

solrize@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 01:48 next collapse

I see, yeah there is something about it in the blurb. How do you like the tablet? Is it responsive? Is it full of Android bloatware? Do you know if it is rootable?

I see there is a 14 inch version that’s about $300 and that starts to get interesting. It’s not “2nd gen” though. And, I had thought of TCL as a lower tier manufacturer with quality issues, but I hadn’t looked into it much.

I like that the tablet has an SD (probably microSD) slot. Don’t like that there’s no headphone jack. There’s plenty of space in those things compared to a phone.

ray@lemmy.ml on 09 Dec 12:20 collapse

So I’ve gotten to use the tablet a bit now and I would say it’s fine. I might expect a bit more for $170 but because it’s so big I can excuse it. Um, it’s a little laggy, um, just out of the box. It doesn’t have much bloatware, maybe two or three manufacturer apps, but not like Candy Crush and all that junk. My very basic research tells me it’s not rootable. I’m really not sure if there is actually a special technology to the screen or it’s just like a matte screen protector but I sat in the park in full sunlight and was able to read a book perfectly well not quite as good as a paperwhite but pretty close so overall it’s decent and the pen works pretty well for writing and drawing. Compared to how much an iPad costs, I think the quality is fairly close.

solrize@lemmy.ml on 09 Dec 12:43 collapse

Thanks, it is kind of intriguing though I keep telling myself to just use normal Linux stuff instead of Android. I’d want the 14 inch one which is around $300. Is there any trouble installing F-droid and apps from there?

Alternatives I’m thinking of include Lenovo Yoga laptop (16 inch) and a Raspberry Pi thing with an HDMI monitor (that would be plug-in only but I mostly read at home).

ray@lemmy.ml on 10 Dec 10:58 collapse

F-droid is working great. Hard to say this vs a linux setup. It’s not super lightweight but more than a laptop for sure if that matters for you. The 14 inch one seems pretty monster so at that point maybe a laptop is worth it.

solrize@lemmy.ml on 10 Dec 11:17 collapse

My sister has a 13 inch ipad and it’s a nice size, 14" should be fine. I have some doubts about the big Lenovo though. My main interest is reading full page PDFs so anything less than 14" will be annoying. Ok I’ll give it more thought. Laptop prices are going to go up because of the dram shortage too. Sigh.

ray@lemmy.ml on 10 Dec 22:53 collapse

Speaking of laptops. I’ve been kicking around this idea for almost a year now. I wanna make a tool that takes ebay listings for ThinkPads and basically shows them on a table that’s super easy to filter and includes benchmark scores. Kinda like what lab gopher used to be. Lots of people want a good deal on ThinkPads but ebay search for them can be rough because of the fuzzy search. Like if I just want the best deal on a Thinkpad from the past 3 years that’s not easy to search for on ebay. Main thing stopping me is ebay API requires an application and I’m sure they block scrapers to some extent.

solrize@lemmy.ml on 10 Dec 23:24 collapse

I’ve bought most of mine on craiglist but either way you sort of have to know what you’re doing. I’d say just sort by price and scroll through the results in the range you want to pay. You might also filter on “within 25 miles” or whatever, and get a unit that you can pick up in person. Or at least, try to talk to the person on the phone to get a sense that they know what it is that they are selling.

Thinkpads forum is still around and has a forsale section. It has slowed down but is still active:

forum.thinkpads.com/viewforum.php?f=11

I’ve bought stuff from there in the distant past.

uranibaba@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 13:25 collapse

Could it be that it aims to be the same technology? E-Ink is a brand.

Mylk@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Dec 01:48 collapse

It’s lcd with some matte finish, far from eink.

noahimesaka1873@lemmy.funami.tech on 04 Dec 01:39 next collapse

KOReader the GOAT.

ray@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 01:52 collapse

Do you have it setup to sync highlights/annotations? how does that work for you?

TheFerventLion@sh.itjust.works on 04 Dec 05:53 collapse

I’ve been synching progress and stats between a pair of devices! It’s been great since it runs well on my haul broken kindle & my android.

There is some(maybe a bit more than some) setup time to get used to the layers of menus, but it’s a pretty robust app.

Osiris@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 15:58 collapse

How are you syncing progress? I got ipds working but it doesn’t sync progress

TheFerventLion@sh.itjust.works on 05 Dec 05:27 collapse

I’ve currently got progress syncing through Calibre-Web-Automated, but I’d also tried it via KoInsights which I’m using for syncing reading stats. I’m in the process of migrating to my library to BookLore which also has a sync server.

ray@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 01:50 next collapse

github.com/readest/readest is looking quite promising

hoppolito@mander.xyz on 04 Dec 03:58 collapse

I’ve been exclusively reading my fiction books (all epubs) on Readest and absolutely love it. Recently I also started using it for my nonfiction books and articles (mostly pdf) as an experiment, and it’s workable but a little more rough around the edges still.

You can highlight and annotate, and export all annotations for a book once you are done, for which I have set up a small pipeline to directly import them into my reference management software.

It works pretty well with local storage (though I don’t believe it does ‘auto-imports’ of new files by default) and I’ve additionally been using their free hosted offering to sync my book progress. It’s neat and free up to 500mb of books, but you’re right that I would also prefer a byo storage solution, perhaps in the future.

The paid upgrades are mostly for AI stuff and translations which I don’t really concern myself with.

thagoat@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Dec 12:49 next collapse

Moon+ has what you’re looking for. Syncs to box, Dropbox, gdrive and webdav. And can download from opds libraries like calibre if you selfhost your epubs.

jsnfwlr@lemmy.ml on 06 Dec 03:48 collapse

Moon reader + with webdav sync for progress etc and SyncThing for books.

Chaphasilor@feddit.nl on 04 Dec 14:15 collapse

I’m a fan of Lithium myself. It’s really solid app, with great performance, super reliable. It’s closed source though and has a pro version.
But I found it better for my needs than Moon+