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Back to Timeline !community @fonix232
In reply to 4 earlier posts
@schizoidman@lemmy.zip on lemmy.zip Open parent
Amazon: Older Kindles can no longer download e-books
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@Walk_blesseD@piefed.blahaj.zone on piefed.blahaj.zone Open parent
lol i already jailbroke my 2012 paperwhite and intstalled Koreader on it so I can sync it with my calibre epub library over wifi
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@fonix232@fedia.io on fedia.io Open parent
It's a pity Calibre to date refuses to be refactored into a self-hosted service. The core logic should be portable, with the app just being an interface to it, but no, the entire project is so much spaghetti it would feed the entire boot for over a year... such a shame.
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@Brewchin@lemmy.world on lemmy.world Open parent
Agree, though calibre-web exists and runs in a single Docker container. I've been using it for a few years, and it's great. Sure its a whole Linux server under the hood _just_ to run Calibre and the services required to give it a web interface and API for reading apps - making it _way_ bigger than it needs to be - but it does the job.
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fonix232 in !community
@fonix232@fedia.io · 9d
A docker container is preferred, but again, CW isn't Calibre. Same database but completely different management system + also lacking a lot of the sync opportunities. The issue is that there's no _open_ protocol for library syncing. It doesn't exist because all big players (Amazon, Kobo/Rakuten, B&N, etc.) have their own proprietary system, and need no open alternatives. OPDS is a thing but it's meant to replicate a physical library (one you can walk into) in behaviour and approach, not a personal library (list all books I have and give me easy access to them). It's essentially just an RSS-style feed that has no defined structure, thus isn't software navigable - e.g. there's no guarantee you can list all book series, or all authors, and most implementations usually give you very roughly defined "recently added", or "hot now" book lists... I've actually been working on a solution for this, something that provides an almost Kindle library experience (see all your books from a remote server, sync down the remote ebook file, sync back read progress, filter/search based on book properties, etc.), while being flexible enough for non-readers applications as well. But I haven't even gotten to the point where I can define the API contract properly, let alone the backing database and mapping to Calibre. Honestly at this stage I feel like the best approach is starting from scratch, establishing modern requirements, and going from there.
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