I’ve been a book reader for a long time, but never got into eBooks. I want to try it out next, but don’t want to use any privacy vilotating devices or software. So, those “10 best” lists I found while searching are out, all of the Amazon crap is out.

What’s left? What’s a good device to buy so I can self-host my own eBook library and get into eReading. I would prefer suggestions for devices which just read books and comics and such. I don’t need access to the app stores on it, I think.

Thanks for any ideas.

ETA: I have a Linux PC and an Android phone, if those things matter.

ETA2: Thank you all for these replies. You’ve given me a lot to think about and I appreciate the help!

  • retrolasered@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    Is rakuten more private? I only know them for the smart tv app.

    Whats the experience like for buying ebooks with a kobo? Is it easy to do, are there lots of books, are there lots of ads?

    • Yingwu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      No ads. Easy to buy. It you’re really concerned about privacy, just flash KOReader on it which is an alternative backend. The easier alternative is to never connect to the WiFi and manually transfer ePubs to the device through Calibre.

      • ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        I got a Kobo and just use the networking to sync Pocket articles. Stock system.

        I don’t even think an account is available in my country. Just been syncing over Calibre. It’s not perfect (it uses a community plugin) but once you get the quirks of the Calibre-to-Kobo transfer it’s easy enough.

        Now the hard part. Actually reading.

        • Yingwu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          Lol. An e-Reader was actually one of the best purchases I’ve done. Started reading waaaay more than before. Also great that one can start digesting all those old out-of-copyright ebooks from like standardebooks.org, on a screen that resembles paper. I can never read a book on an ordinary screen.

          • ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 day ago

            I still prefer paper, although not having to store moisture-sensitive fragile things is nice. So is the fact that I can read books that are out of print or hard to find (or banned, yay Middle East), even if fumbling with PDFs isn’t wonderful on the device.

            And of course, the obvious: downloading them for free. Which is always ethical when Routledge wants to charge you 85$ for a scholarly work of which the author doesn’t see a dollar.

      • retrolasered@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        Thank you. Ive read that you can get ebooks from puplic libraries in uk with kobo but not kindle. Looking at getting one for my mum. Shes not tech literate, she can buy and read an ebook but shes always accidentally subscribing to amazon subscriptions on the kindle

    • UndulyUnruly@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Just don’t connect it to a network. Calibre to manage your library, transfer books via USB, done. Kobo+Calibre works fine on Linux.

      However, in rare cases Kobo devices can be a bit funny with displaying covers properly without internet access to fetch/correct them “automatically”. This is not privacy friendly, obviously.

      YMMV with this issue, but regardless if you choose a Kobo or not, I’ll drop some handy tips for you below just in case you care to polish your experience via Calibre.

      I can’t give credit for below cause this is copied from my notes and I don’t know the author/source. Enjoy.


      Calibre is so powerful and customizable that it has a bewildering amount of options and ways to do things. I wanted to scrape good metadata and covers for my ebook library in the simplest way I could. Here’s my procedure:

      PREPARING THE MEDATA SOURCES (This only needs to be done once)

      1. Go to Preferences -> Get plugins to enhance Calibre -> find and install the ‘Kindle hi-res covers’ and ‘Goodreads’ plugins. Reboot Calibre.

      2. With your library open in Calibre, choose a selection of ebooks -> Ctrl+D to download metadata and covers -> configure download.

      3. On the lower right hand side, I set ‘Max. number of tags to download:’ at 4. This is personal preference.

      4. The only sources to have check marks (with their corresponding cover priority) should be:

        • Goodreads: 3

          • almost always has the best metadata, and is best for tags, which I limit to 4
        • Google Images: 2

          • While selected: Configure selected source -> [Choose your preferred cover size and max number of covers to retrieve - I up it to 10]

          • If you end up choosing the covers individually Google often has good covers the other sources don’t

        • Kindle hi-res covers: 1

          • It usually has the best covers but can be a pain because it often picks a foreign cover and you have to go choose the cover individually afterwards.

          • I change the maximum number of covers to get from 5 to 10, but that’s not necessary.

      PREPARING THE EBOOKS FOR SCRAPING COVERS AND METADATA

      I clear all the ‘Rating’, Tags’ and ‘Series’ fields because the data may be from all over the place (tags are often particularly awful), but Goodreads metadata will standardize it (as far as it can be for my liking, anyway - they seem to have a finite and well-ordered number of tags unlike many other sources). You can clear other fields but I only do those three.

      1. Select your books -> Right-click -> Edit metadata -> Edit metadata in bulk

      2. For ‘Rating:’ select ‘Not rated’ from the dropdown and then check ‘Apply rating’ on the right

      3. Also on the right side, check ‘Remove all’ on the ‘Remove tags:’ row and ‘Clear series’ below it.

      TO GET COVERS

      1. Select the ebooks you want to scrape and press Ctrl+D -> Download only covers.

        • If I choose ‘Download both’ I usually have to reject many because the cover is foreign or something, and then I end up scraping the metadata separately anyway.
      2. When the job is done -> Review downloaded metadata -> Check ‘Mark rejected books’ (this option will stay selected in the future) then go through the books, pressing ‘Reject’ for any books that don’t have a satisfactory cover.

      3. After finishing the selections, the marked books will show. Select them all -> Right click - > select ‘Edit metadata individually’

      4. Press ‘Download cover’, select a cover, and press ‘Next’ until finished

      5. Select all the rejected books and press Ctrl-M to toggle the marked (pinned) status to off

        • I put the ‘Mark books’ icon in the main toolbar with Preferences -> Toolbars & menus -> select ‘The main toolbar’ from the dropdown and move the ‘Mark books’ icon to the column on the right
      6. Press the X at the end of the search bar to clear the selection and get back to the main book list.

        • If you don’t see the search bar add it by pressing ‘Layout’ at the bottom right and toggling ‘Search bar’ to ‘Show’.

      Rather than using the above steps, if I have some free time I like to select ALL the covers manually, because it can be fun to look at the different choices. Sometimes I’ll pick a foreign cover because the art is better. (Also many of the larger covers - especially from Kindle hi-res - are actually much blurrier than some smaller choices and you can’t tell from the thumbnails so I like to right-click and compare them at full size) To do it this way, instead of doing step 1 above:

      1. Select the ebooks you want to scrape -> Right-click -> Edit metadata -> Edit metadata individually

      2. Do Step 4. That will be the last step

      TO GET METADATA

      1. Select the books you want to scrape and press Ctrl+D -> Download only metadata.

      2. When the job is done -> ‘Review downloaded metadata’ OR ‘Yes’

        • If I DO review the metadata, I usually only check the comments, because I can usually trust the metadata from GoodReads
      3. OPTIONAL: If any of the metadata you reviewed is unsatisfactory, ‘Reject’ it when reviewing, then do step 3 from the ‘TO GET COVERS’ section, then go to step 4 but select ‘Download Metadata’ instead of cover and follow the instructions from there.

      You should now be finished selecting metadata for your selected books!

      • retrolasered@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        Thanks, very detailed. I was looking to get my mum, whos not tech literate at all, off the kindle; have seen she could get ebooks at a library with the kobo (uk). But with this info I think I might want one for myself too to use offline as described