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The Kindle is a closed system. Amazon is unlikely to support reading books on it that they didn't sell you. Notice that the most common format for public domain ebooks is not supported by the Kindle (if my memory is correct)
Prov. 15:23
The Kindle is a closed system. Amazon is unlikely to support reading books on it that they didn't sell you. Notice that the most common format for public domain ebooks is not supported by the Kindle (if my memory is correct)
That's actually not true at all. All you have to do to read on a kindle is have it in a format that is supported including word doc, rtf, epub, pdf. If Logos wanted to and could get publisher rights to (the bigger hurdle) have an export to feature and let you choose one of those. I create stuff to read on my kindle all the time. I have a nice black leather folder for mine so when I did a wedding I send my wedding outline to it and bumped up the type and it went great. I have some text documents that I have converted into epub and read them on the Kindle. This doable. The only hurdles are ...
1. Logos being willing to engineer their software for it.
2. Publishers being wlling to give them the rights to do it.
Number 1 is not a problem for the fine folks in Washington. I know they could do it. And since they are working on #2 for iPhone, why not go two for one with the Kindle?
Dr. Kevin Purcell, Director of Missions
Brushy Mountain Baptist Association
That's actually not true at all. All you have to do to read on a kindle is have it in a format that is supported including word doc, rtf, epub, pdf. If Logos wanted to and could get publisher rights to (the bigger hurdle) have an export to feature and let you choose one of those. I create stuff to read on my kindle all the time. I have a nice black leather folder for mine so when I did a wedding I send my wedding outline to it and bumped up the type and it went great. I have some text documents that I have converted into epub and read them on the Kindle. This doable. The only hurdles are ...
1. Logos being willing to engineer their software for it.
2. Publishers being wlling to give them the rights to do it.
Number 1 is not a problem for the fine folks in Washington. I know they could do it. And since they are working on #2 for iPhone, why not go two for one with the Kindle?
Not being a Kindle owner, I forgot about the other files it supports, my bad. [:$]
You've gotten the Kindle to read epub? Everything I've read says the Kindle doesn't support epub.
Either way, I apologize for speaking w/out fact-checking what were a set of incomplete impressions.
Prov. 15:23
You are right. Not epub but pbd I think. I have not done it in a long time as the last few that I put on there were just text that I opened in Word and then emailed them that way.
Dr. Kevin Purcell, Director of Missions
Brushy Mountain Baptist Association
The Kindle is a closed system. Amazon is unlikely to support reading books on it that they didn't sell you. Notice that the most common format for public domain ebooks is not supported by the Kindle (if my memory is correct)
That's actually not true at all. All you have to do to read on a kindle is have it in a format that is supported including word doc, rtf, epub, pdf. If Logos wanted to and could get publisher rights to (the bigger hurdle) have an export to feature and let you choose one of those. I create stuff to read on my kindle all the time. I have a nice black leather folder for mine so when I did a wedding I send my wedding outline to it and bumped up the type and it went great. I have some text documents that I have converted into epub and read them on the Kindle. This doable. The only hurdles are ...
1. Logos being willing to engineer their software for it.
2. Publishers being wlling to give them the rights to do it.
Number 1 is not a problem for the fine folks in Washington. I know they could do it. And since they are working on #2 for iPhone, why not go two for one with the Kindle?
Kevin - I do not have a Kindle but am interested. Do you think it
would be a good tool for sermon notes? I mean preaching straight from
the Kindle?
Jerry
Macbook Air (2024), Apple M2, 16gb Ram, Mac Sequoia, 1TB storage
Jerry,
Not the way I preach. I would have to come back and hit the next button and previous button to find my place. For me the best approaches are to a)memorize and preach extemporaneously or b) use dead trees.
What I have done is do a wedding from it. But when I do a wedding I am basically just reading the service for the most part. If you preach that way (shame on you[;)]) then it works great. But finding your place if you step away from the pulpit/lecturn and then returning would be an issue.
Dr. Kevin Purcell, Director of Missions
Brushy Mountain Baptist Association
Kevin - I do not have a Kindle but am interested. Do you think it would be a good tool for sermon notes? I mean preaching straight from the Kindle?
Jerry
I bought the Kindle DX so I could use it for my sermon notes while preaching. (The DX is about 2.5 times larger than the regular Kindle.) I use a detailed outline while preaching so I covert my notes to a PDF file and copy it over to my Kindle. The PDF retains all of the indentation. I also use very large fonts.
The only problem I have had so far is that once I hit the wrong button and went to the previous page. I had to hit the next page button twice to get to the right place in my outline. Of course that is minor compared to the time I dropped my paper notes off the pulpit.
Last week I taught an eight hour conference giving a Christian critique of Islam. The presentation had 150 Power Point slides. I created a separate page on my Kindle for each slide along with additional information that was not on the Power Point presentation. I was able to keep my Kindle in step with the computer.
The Kindle is a closed system. Amazon is unlikely to support reading books on it that they didn't sell you. Notice that the most common format for public domain ebooks is not supported by the Kindle (if my memory is correct)
Since I own a Kindle I don't have to guess about its capabilities. There are thousands of free books available for wireless download at the Kindle store. One example is Halley's Bible Handbook with the New International Version which is currently free (including the wireless download).
The Kindle can read mobi-format eBooks. There are several free programs that you can use to covert other eBook formats to mobi. One free program is Calibre.
I often want to read many of the books that I have purchased for my Logos library. It is much easier and comfortable to read them with my Kindle while I am sitting in my favorite chair. I can hold the Kindle like a book and its battery will last longer than I can stay awake before it needs to be recharged. Logos 4 excels at research and searching a vast library. The Kindle excels at reading eBooks.
I mentioned earlier that there were thousands of free books available for the Kindle. I thought I would post some links to document this claim.
Link to the almost 20,000 books that you can download for free from the Kindle store using the built in wireless.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/search?tag=kwab-20&node=154606011&p_36=0-0&redirect=true
Link to new non-public domain books that are available for free for the Kindle.
http://www.amazon.com/s/?keywords=-domain&tag=kwab-20&rs=154606011&page=1&bbn=154606011&rh=n:133140011,n:!133141011,n:154606011,k:-domain,p_36:0-0&sort=-edition-sales-velocity
Link to free Project Gutenberg eBooks that you can download for free. (Kindle uses the Mobi format.)
http://www.freekindlebooks.org/MagicCatalog/magiccatalog.html
Link explaining how to convert a million free Google books in ePub format so you can read them on the Kindle.
http://kindleworld.blogspot.com/2009/08/million-free-google-books-in-epub-for.html
Just to add my vote. It would be fantastic to be able to export books from Logos to the Kindle to save the eyes. Logos 4 is fantastic for study, etc., but the Kindle is (obviously) more convenient and comfortable for leisurely reading... To import our notes from the Kindle into Logos would be peachy... but I would settle for just being able to export to the Kindle.
I am easily pleased.
I am lovin Logos 4 btw... Thank you team Logos!
Kindle? No
But I hope Logos seriously considers the Barnes & Noble Nook -- its a more open platform, and I'm guessing it will steal a very large segment of the ebook market away from the Kindle.
I would love to hear it explained why people think this. Maybe I'm missing something, but the Kindle is no more closed than the Nook. It reads a great many formats. I can make all my documents, whether Word .doc, html, rtf, txt, even pdf into Kindle books including making covers and workable tables of contents. I can also read my Kindle books on my iPhone and on my desktop. I checked out the Nook and its present advantage is color, which I think Kindle is adopting soon (it will be forced to, though it will use more battery power that way). Another possible advantage of the Nook is that it takes a data card, which could be good for, say, a Logos library if a massive version is ever available. But in terms of being a closed system, I don't get that. I have probably missed something.
Kindle is definitely NOT a closed system. It may seem closed if I have a book in one of the formats it does not support, but it supports enough formats that it is not closed. In fact you can buy the hardware and use it a lot never ever putting a single purchased book on it. It has a very limited web browser. It takes books via email. You just send it the device's email address and it syncs up (there is a small fee for this) or you can send it to another email address and they will convert the document and you get it via email and then can add it manually via the USB cable.
I don't mind that it is not color. Keeps the battery life good. With Whisper Sync turned on (the sprint radio) I get about a few days of life with heavy usage. With it off I get a couple of weeks.
The nook has a cool feature that you can read books while you are in the B&N store. I'd love that. I have a coffee shop in the one in Hickory and I would be happy to go there and read every Monday after lunch and never buy a book. But that is the only real feature that I envy.
Dr. Kevin Purcell, Director of Missions
Brushy Mountain Baptist Association
I read my Logos 4 Library on my Kindle everyday. Use the Web browser to access the mobile site. (library.logos.com) I logged in a long time ago with the basic browser and now access my Library with the browser in Advanced Mode. Not being Java enabled limits some features, but I read everyday without having to break out the laptop.
Rob
I checked out the Nook and its present advantage is color, which I think Kindle is adopting soon (it will be forced to, though it will use more battery power that way).
I checked out the Nook page too and it's somewhat misleading. Apparently there a separate color touchscreen for book selection, while for books it is basically using (I think) the same e-ink display which is in black and white. [:O]
There is a way of reading Logos books on Kindle, though it takes some work...
1) Copy your selection, chapter, or book.
2) Paste into Microsoft Word.
3) Download the free PrimoPDF software.
4) After installing PrimoPDF, you can print from Word to a PDF document.
5) Load the PDF onto your Kindle.
I haven't been able to try this, since I don't own a Kindle, but it should work. Let me know how it works for you, and if it is worth it. Money is tight now that I'm in seminary, but maybe when prices drop, I'll be able to try it out.
There is a way of reading Logos books on Kindle, though it takes some work...
1) Copy your selection, chapter, or book.
2) Paste into Microsoft Word.
3) Download the free PrimoPDF software.
4) After installing PrimoPDF, you can print from Word to a PDF document.
5) Load the PDF onto your Kindle.
I haven't been able to try this, since I don't own a Kindle, but it should work. Let me know how it works for you, and if it is worth it. Money is tight now that I'm in seminary, but maybe when prices drop, I'll be able to try it out.
This is called format shifting and is illegal under U.S. copyright law.
Prov. 15:23
There is a way of reading Logos books on Kindle, though it takes some work...
1) Copy your selection, chapter, or book.
2) Paste into Microsoft Word.
3) Download the free PrimoPDF software.
4) After installing PrimoPDF, you can print from Word to a PDF document.
5) Load the PDF onto your Kindle.
I haven't been able to try this, since I don't own a Kindle, but it should work. Let me know how it works for you, and if it is worth it. Money is tight now that I'm in seminary, but maybe when prices drop, I'll be able to try it out.
This is called format shifting and is illegal under U.S. copyright law.
Just a thought... I doubt the illegality of this (whether true or not) would stand up in court with a "fair use" defense.... Granted, posting it in a public forum might change that, but for personal use (if owned) I'd be willing to go to court over it...
(Note: I do not have or use an Ereader of any kind, was just thinking of the legal issues here)
To clarify, I have not done this myself, but I think it's worth discussing. I posted this in another thread, so I'll just copy my edited version here:
If I own a printed book, am I able to make a photocopy of some selected pages to protect them? Is God bothered if I do that, or is He bothered when I break the purpose of the law? For example, maybe I didn't want to ruin my original copy, so I wanted to carry around the photocopy instead. This happens especially with out-of-print books.
It seems like the "spirit of the law" is to prevent reproduction and/or resale of the book, so that someone else illegally profits. For instance, it would be immoral to burn a copy of a CD to your computer (keeping the MP3's), then resell the CD on Half.com. In that case, you are changing the format and profiting. Or, if you gave away PDF's of your Logos books for free, that would also be stealing from the publisher.
On the other hand, copying for your own purposes -- when no one else is reading the text at the same time -- seems to be a different case. I think it is helpful to distinguish between these purposes. If there is no different, then we probably shouldn't print anything from Logos; that would be changing the format from digital to print.
Thoughts?
Now that Amazon is planning a "Kindle App Store" (http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-10438661-36.html). Logos can theoritically make a Logos 4 App for Kindle. That would be really cool!
Then again, we have one Kindle in the house and my wife uses mine all the time, so I spend most of the time reading my Kindle (and Logos) books on my Iphone!
--Alex
Now that Amazon is planning a "Kindle App Store" (http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-10438661-36.html). Logos can theoritically make a Logos 4 App for Kindle. That would be really cool!
Then again, we have one Kindle in the house and my wife uses mine all the time, so I spend most of the time reading my Kindle (and Logos) books on my Iphone!
--Alex
It would be fantastic to have a full-blown Logos app on the Kindle, but I would settle for just being able to export my books legally and conveniently from Logos to the Kindle. I fear, however, that attention might be directed towards the iSlate (presuming it exists) come Wednesday...
Oh well, something else to add to my Birthday list! [;)]
My birthday is only three weeks away, so can they please hurry up.
I do hope there will be an app for the kindle, I think I prefer to have a kindle above the iPod, it's a bit bigger screen.
I agree that the Kindle is a far superior reading experience to the iPod... However, the rumour is that the iSlate will have a 10" screen... now that is tempting... I suspect the price may be the thing that restrains me... for now!
Having said that, my Birthday is not until May, so that gives me a little longer than you to save! [:D]
I agree completely. When I want to study, I will use logos on my computer. As a new owner of a kindle, the reason I bought was to read, and I have no doubt that if a logos app for the kindle would be created, I'd spend an inordinate amount of time reading books on the kindle that are in my logos library. I'm not as likely to do that on an iphone or itouch or ipad, as I think the e-ink lends itself to longer periods of reading. And I don't really want to do all that much highlighting, taking notes etc. I realize some might want to do that with their logos material if it was on a device like kindle, but I think if Bob and the Logos team could simply develop a kindle app with the new app store, which would access my logos books, I would read the hundreds of books I have in Logos format... man I can just imagine sitting down and reading through Luther's Works, or the Leadership Library, soaking it all in. I'm not as likely to do that in front of my computer, or with the i-line of hardware, as I do think Kindle or other eink e-readers are a great tool to do exactly that... read... Any thoughts Bob and Team Logos! BTW, looking forward to warmer weather so I can begin to wear my Logos Cycling jersey, which is totally off topic! [:D]
I'd also like to add my vote for the development of a Logos for Kindle (or any other e-reader which uses the digital ink). I think such an agreement might be an immensely helpful both to Logos and to the producer of whatever e-reader the agreement was reached with.I know that personally, if Logos announced a partnership with Kindle today, I'd buy a Kindle tomorrow. not only would this obviously increased Kindle sales, I think it make people more likely to purchase Logos books as well.I know I've heard many people complain that although it's great to have books and Logos. They really would want to buy anything other than reference material. I personally buy books, I know I'll just read and Logos format, but the eyestrain is definitely a drawback. Having the volumes available for reading in Kindle would definitely make the reading experience more enjoyable. Personally, I think such a move would be a huge step forward even if it didn't come with anything but the books themselves.
I realize some might want to do that with their logos material if it was on a device like kindle, but I think if Bob and the Logos team could simply develop a kindle app with the new app store, which would access my logos books, I would read the hundreds of books I have in Logos format... man I can just imagine sitting down and reading through Luther's Works, or the Leadership Library, soaking it all in.
Bob, I agree.
One thing that would be important to me though, is that I DO LIKE to highlight.
So being able to read a book, highlight it on L4, then go to the Kindle and have the highlights already done show up, would really be great.
Going to the doctor's office is a great place for me to pull out my iPhone and proceed reading, where I left off. Then go back home and my Kindle has the changes in location noted and I read from where I took off.
I suspect that within 5 years, there will be some big changes to how ebooks work. For one, there will be more flexibility in reading some file formats on other devices. Perhaps Amazon will not permit other devices to read theirs, but you can already read Kindle on iPhone and on the PC. If Amazon permitted copying a .mobi file, then there would be little to hold them back.
Of course, the color might be nice. What I did with my Olivetree stuff is set a beige background with dark brown letters. Quite easy on my eyes.
OK, I'm convinced, I'm going to buy a Kindle. Can you give me some advice. I live in Europe, Latvia. Is it possible for me to buy a Kindle from America? Or will I have problems with charging the batteries? Or other problems maybe?
This may help: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B003DZ1Y7M. You can select Latvia in the "Primary Country of Use." I have been extremely pleased with my Kindle.
Pastor, Cornerstone Baptist Church, Clinton, SC
I love my Kindle, but I would think that at present it's not the best medium for Logos. Just too limited in how you can work with the information there. It's built for reading, and it's great for that. On the other hand, Kindle will certainly evolve, and there are a multitude of other e-readers coming out as we speak, many with color and more functionality. As Logos becomes more cloud-based in the future, I would expect us to be able to access it in many ways. The iPhone app is surely just the beginning, though I believe a big screen will always be best for really getting the Logos experience.
http://www.robsuggs.com
Apple's inevitable forthcoming much-rumored tablet will play a big role and possibly change e-readers much like the iPhone did for cell phones.
Here's an interesting concept:
http://www.cultofmac.com/how-would-apple-change-publishing-heres-one-theory/21225
That is the point. That is why any book that you intend to read extensively, from cover to cover, will be better on a kindle than the "big screen." Now for Bible study, reference work, searching, etc. there is nothing like Logos on the computer. For reading, the Kindle is a thousand times better.
People are already reading their Logos resources on the Kindle. It is just awkward to do so now. The Kindle is such a popular format that I think Logos will eventually be more accommodating to it.
"In all cases, the Church is to be judged by the Scripture, not the Scripture by the Church," John Wesley
I would love to be able to read L4 resources on my Kindle 2. But does anyone seriously think this will ever be a possibility?
You currently can read many of your L4 resources on the Kindle by going in the browser to library.logos.com.
Jacob Hantla
Pastor/Elder, Grace Bible Church
gbcaz.org
I'm new to LOGOS and have been reading through the forums. I am wanting to buy a Kindle, JUST TO READ the books and not do work....
Is this possible? It seems like, from what was said, that books need to be copied into a word format before transferring to Kindle. Is this still true? How much of a hassle is it?
Thank you.
Agreed. Its not a case of Librinox 'competing' with Amazon.
I have a Kindle. I have Logos (on mac). Its a 'no brainer' to want to be able to read Logos great resources on a portable device designed for reading. I just want to read, not markup or fiddle or search; just read. I then want to be able to use that knowledge I gained, in sermon preparation which I do back in Logos on the macbook.
At the moment, I have to either:
1) use the trapdoor (non-optimised) route of browsing for my logos resources on the Kindle, or
2) dump out my Logos resources to MS Word (bit by bit), then save as PDF (or use Calibre eBook management), then import to Kindle. Not a low-maintenance solution!
If Logos resources were all available in Kindle format (to Logos customers), then I'd purchase more resources through Logos, rather than deciding to wait for them to be kindle-ised (via amazon), or go the poor customer just wants the obvious but can't get it route above.
Librinox will lose out unless they go multi-format, and they will gain customer loyalty and more revenues if they open out to Kindle. The lock-in that Librinox has is the license cost of the resource and the software. I've paid for that, now I'm politely 'demanding' Kindle format Logos resources. Thanks.
Does anyone know, meanwhile, whether there is a 3rd party logos-to-kindle batch converter? (not to pdf, but to native kindle) I'd pay $25 for that, as long as it was kept up to date with format changes either end. If not, then where is the commercial restriction? Who is not opening up the formats via an SDK? I guess Amazon see loss of revenue if they let Librinox at it for free. So, what do Amazon charge for an SDK? This would be a small development and testing project for a professional software operation to undertake... Do Librinox want to sub it out?
)
I agree, Justin. I have many Logos resources that I want to read simply for edification. I use Logos for research, but I'm not real thrilled to read a resource on my Lenovo notebook. Reading on a Logos-loaded iPad may be good, but I don't have a real need to spend $500 or whatever for an iPad. I already have more Logos pre-pubs than I can afford! Being able to read many of my Logos resources on Kindle, without involved work-arounds, would be ideal. Until then, I'll have to learn to do the work-around.
Pastor, Cornerstone Baptist Church, Clinton, SC
It will depend on what the license agreement is. It seems some publishers may want to charge Logos a license for each copy of each book in each format ... so if a user wanted it on Logos desktop and on iPhone and on Kindle that cou;ld be more than one license to pay. ... I assume ...
www.emmanuelecc.org