![]() ![]() Each Kindle device has its own unique email address that you can mail ebooks to. Getting compatible ebooks to Kindle couldn’t be easier. If you need ePub support, look at the alternative below. If you can get over this hump, Kindle is the best way to store, read and sync all your books. You’ll have to convert your DRM-free ebooks to Mobi format first, using something like Calibre. But the only problem is that Kindle doesn’t support ePub formats. ![]() Kindle allows you to upload your own documents to its cloud servers and syncs them with all available devices. Adding And Syncing Your Own Books To Kindle Interestingly, this is also true for any document/ DRM-free ebook you upload to Amazon’s cloud. As long as both devices are connected to the internet, the syncing will take place. And that includes the Kindle ebook reader. If you buy and read books on Amazon Kindle, you don’t need to worry about syncing read positions because Amazon takes care of that by itself. But it gets complicated when you add your own collection of DRM-free ePubs. If you just buy books from Kindle, this kind of stuff is easy. How do you make sure that when you turn off your tablet and pick up your phone during the commute that the book you were reading will pick up from where you left off? Today we’ll talk about a small, yet significant point in this debate – syncing read positions for ebooks between devices. All that access to technology is great but it brings up a big issue of syncing data. These days, it’s not odd to find 3–4 devices to one name. ![]() Households went from one desktop that used to sit in the living room to multiple laptops/tablets/cell phones. ![]()
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