You should see a folder called _book appear on the root of your project.Inside this folder, you will see a bunch of .html files: these constitute theweb-site of your book. You can right click on index.html and open it with aweb browser and see how your book, as a web-site, looks like. You could hostthis book on Github pages for free!
However this is not enough. There is a bug in the current release of Quarto thatprevents this from working, even though we did what we should. However, this bugis already corrected in the development version of the nextrelease.But until the next version of Quarto, 1.3, gets released, here is theworkaround; you need to also specify the language of the book:
is related to the image. It turns out that including the image like we didgenerates code that is not quite correct from the point of view of thestandard that Epubs should follow. You should know that Epubs are actually acollection of HTML files, so you can include images by using HTML code in thesource Markdown files.
Now, each time you push, you should see your Epub get built in the gh-pagesbranch! If you use R code chunks, you also need to set up an action to set up R.Take a look at therepoof my book for an example.
Hope you enjoyed! If you found this blog post useful, you might want to followme on Mastodon or twitter for blog post updates andbuy me an espresso or paypal.me, or buy my ebooks.You can also watch my videos on youtube.So much content for you to consoom!
I am the proud, and happy, owner of a reMarkable tablet. Wanting to try out it's eBook feature, I bought an eBook (epub), but ADE doesn't recognize my reMarkable, I've been able to load the eBook from the finder into the reMarkable app, but when I open the file the pages are all white in the app on my Mac, and the eBook won't even open on the tablet.
If you are a student that likes to take notes or perhaps write on pdfs and other papers, then perhaps you will get some use out of it - or you draw.... other than that there is nothing else that other tablets cant do and more.
I asked them to give me my money back and of course they would not, made every excuse under the sun. Im just waiting and hoping that the people that build this archaic monstrosity actually catch up with real technology! Then perhaps Ill find some use for it. In the meantime it stays in the box ..... unless someone wants to buy it from me?????
truth, I just verified, ADE and the RE:Markable are still not a thing... which is so sad. The capability to annotate directly on an epaper page is a vastly superior reading and writing experience when campared to glossy color displays. I'll ping RE:Markable and see what the hold up is. Adobe, do you have insight? Does your DRM prohibit annotation and screenshot? Is it a battery/processor thing?
Calibre works for managing epubs without the schmancy shackles of DRM. And personally I prefer PDF's in the same pagelayout as the print edition, like I get with academic journals, as the page refrences are the same as the original published document. This makes for more coherent citation and shared refrencing in my experience. Looking forward to being able to just carry my RE:Markable and not multiple epaper readers...
I bought the remarkable 2 this year and as you said, had high hopes. Not only i can not get a e-book on it but i can not even install their app on my worklaptop because of security issues. And the worst part - you dont get any response from them.
THnk you SO much (everybody). I downloaded the RDM revover, then converted the now PDFs back to ePUBs with Calibre and was tehn able tp drag the books across to my remarkable app on the laptop, which synced with the device. Yes, its B&W but I dont care about that. So happy with this outcome for travellng.
Even if I hope you've found a way to do it (before now I mean), I've found a quick fix today, regarding an epub I bought and needed to be opened through ADE. I hope it'll help people in the future too!
Just go on ADE, click right on the epub and select "Show file in Explorer" (or in Finder on mac). Then, you just have to drag and drop the file to your Remarkable Desktop App and Tadaah!
Another useful option, try this in Firefox; -US/firefox/addon/45281/, a fairly good extension for the Firefox web browser that lets you read .epubs from the browser, especially good since on Ubuntu you are likely to be using Firefox and it is usually kept open when you are using your computer.
lucidor at does a decent job. I completely removed calibre from my system because it doesn't let me leave the books in my own directory structure. (Then spent hours moving the thousands of books into a directory structure I like by hand.) I couldn't find coolreader to try. Okular I like but the extensions did not work on epub for me. fbreader works but you have to open it up first and then the book whereas lucidor you can right click from the file manager to associate epubs to lucidor.
One popular use case of Obsidian appears to be note taking while reading books or articles. PDF documents are supported, but other ebook formats, first and foremost EPUB is not. Considering that an increasing amount of academic literature is published in this format, and of course most fiction and non-fiction ebooks are already available as, or can be converted to, EPUB, I hope that support to embed this format is going to be considered in the short- to mid-term.
Got some test blocks working so that it reads html files from an sd folder. However, I want to read epub or mobi formated files. I was not able to find a relevant extension or examples. Any thoughts on handling these formats?
Probably, but taking notes from a book (pdf) in Logseq is cool because you can take notes and still have context (with block refs). Which allows you to rediscover your notes more deeply if you need it.
I imagine a system where the reader application would allow you to read, highlight, and annotate sections of a book and save all of the relevant data (including links to the exact section) to a single text file per book.
I think this is a better idea than trying to force logseq into being an epub reader on top of being a note taking app. There are plenty of epub reader application developers we could reach out to if this is the direction the community decided to go.
Amazon has millions of ebooks titles available. Most new release and bestsellers cost $9.99. They have hundreds of newspaper, blog, and magazine subscriptions. Formats: Amazon's proprietary format, AZW, of which can be viewed with Amazon's desktop software, a Kindle, an iPad, iPhone, Android device, Blackberry, and iPod Touch. No EPUB titles.Kobo eBooks is a global ebook store with a wide selection that often offers discounts and coupon codes. They have free applications for most smartphones, iDevices, Android, and it comes with the Kobo Reader so you can browse or search for ebooks and download them directly within the software. Formats: EPUB and others, works with Adobe Digital Editions (PDF and EPUB).eBooks.com is a popular store that has over a million titles to choose from. Their top subjects are fiction, business, computers, and technology; and they have a wide selection of academic ebooks and digital textbooks. They are based in Australia and sell to every country in the world. Formats: Adobe Digital Editions (PDF and EPUB), iOS, Android, Kindle Fire and Blackberry.Barnes and Noble has a large library of ebooks and offers lending with the Nook. Most new release and bestsellers cost $9.99. Most prices are competitive with Amazon. Formats: B&N's eReader (PDB) format and EPUB. Note: B&N's ebooks will not work on other EPUB supporting devices unless specifically stated because they use their own DRM system.Google Play Books is a cloud-based approach to ebooks. All your purchased titles get saved to your Google account so that you can access them with any web browser. Most ebooks are downloadable in EPUB and PDF formats, and Adobe DRM for wide compatibility. Formats: Adobe Digital Editions (PDF and EPUB), web browser.eHarlequin.com specializes in offering women a broad range of romance, psychological thrillers, and relationship novels. They have many genres and sub-genres of romance, blaze, nocturne, etc. Formats: Adobe Digital Editions (PDF and EPUB), Microsoft Reader (LIT), and Mobipocket (MOBI/PRC).
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle []).push();AudiobooksAudible.com has over 60,000 audio titles from more than 600 content providers. In addition to audiobooks they have magazines, radio shows, podcasts, stand-up comedy, and speeches in audio format. They have four format options that offer different files sizes and sound quality. Formats: 1. AM radio quality. 2. FM radio. 3. MP3. 4. CD quality. For more about device compatibility and formats visit their device center.
I've uploaded many non-Apple epub books to Books. When I drag and drop them from Books to my computer, other programs (like Calibre) cannot read them. Are they stuck with some DRM or such? All the instructions that I've seen say you should be able to export them by drag and drop.
So, Apple may tell you that just drag-and-drop exports the file, the truth is that it cannot be read by other programs. Yet another way Apple locks you into their ecosystem. They just don't play well with others.
Don't get me wrong - I'm an Apple guy through and through... got more Apple devices than I have toes, but every once in a while I need a bit of flexibility. This problem keeps me from sharing MY files with non-Apple users.
What is the exact error message that you receive, if any? Were these ePub books previously stored in the iCloud Files app? If so, the format of the ePub books should remain. Please use the Files apps to determine if the format to the ePub books has changed.
Thanks for the response. Maybe a better explanation of how to export books would help; I found several answers that say to just drag-and-drop to my Downloads folder and then import to other programs normally. Calibre opens if I say File, Open With from my directory, but does not read the file - just does nothing. If, within Calibre I try to import the epub, it pops up with a "Failed to open", then shows my directory and the file name as the name of the imported file. Trying to open that link just says its not there. Most of the error message says:
c80f0f1006