rsync books back and forth and mess on until your heart is content, as you should be able to with a device you own.Note: your books will end up in /mnt/storage - unimaginative, but very simple.
perhaps useful for annotations too?
rsync books back and forth and mess on until your heart is content, as you should be able to with a device you own.Note: your books will end up in /mnt/storage - unimaginative, but very simple.
perhaps useful for annotations too?
To enable ssh:Rename this file to ssh-enabledReboot the deviceConnect via: ssh root@<device_ip>
while connected to my Mac, edit a hidden file, then you can ssh into it with root at the device IP. First connection will ask for you to set pw.
how to ssh into my kobo ereader.
Terence Eden stopped buying at Amazon like me. Points to a Kobo price guarantee so he wants to automate price comparisons with Amazon (usually cheapest). And then buy and request the return of the difference.
[[Pensare Bene by Luca De Biase]] is available via Kobo Plus
Prezzo: € 9,99 Collana: Visioni Disponibile dal: 26/09/2025 ISBN: 9788812012992
Ebook version is 9,99 in Kobo.
Nicely done browser based but fully local way to look at Kobo highlights and annotations. Downloads in both markdown and text.
Via Adri Mathlener at Digitale Fitheid community who pointed to Rob Hoeij's https://robhoeij.nl/een-betere-manier-om-kobo-notities-en-markeringen-te-exporteren/
Greg Morris with useful / working description of how to export annotations from my Kobo device (by default, Kobo only syncs annotations from books bought at Kobo platform to your account, not from sideloaded books). Edited the Kobo settings and then was able to export annotations. They do not contain the location for an annotation, so you're referencing is 'blind'. Also mentions a Calibre plugin for annotations I have not tried yet.
technology companies have made it work that way. Ebook stores from Amazon, Apple, Google, Kobo, Barnes and Noble all follow broadly the same rules. You’re buying a licence to read, not a licence to own.
Bear in mind that this "ownership" is common practice with Amazon, Apple, Google, Kobo, Barnes and Noble, and other ones as well.
It's not this way with non-DRM books, that you can download, and reuse as with physical books.