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122 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
122 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4207
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Title: HPR4207: Re: The Kindle/Kobo Open Reader (KOReader)
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4207/hpr4207.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 21:22:53
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4200 and 7 for Tuesday the 17th of September 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, Read the Kindle Kobo Open Reader, KO Reader.
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It is hosted by DNT and is about 9 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, a response to Hacker Public Radio 1949 about the KO Reader.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q. We are airing it now because we had free
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slots that were not filled.
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This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
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Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hello my friends and welcome to another exciting episode of this Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm your host DNT.
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So today I'm posting a response show to a show by John Culp, which was posted.
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A while back is kind of an old show.
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I listened to it because I was searching to see if anyone had ever talked about KO Reader
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and turns out John Culp has.
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I have something to add to his show and that's why I figured I'd record a show.
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First of all, excellent show by John Culp there.
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I very much appreciate all the pains you have taken for the typography of the books
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you're reading in your e-reader.
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And yeah, I have appreciated KO Reader for many of the same reasons.
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John Culp cited in his show, including how it uses more of the space on the screen.
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It doesn't enforce such a thick border and also of course it's not the stock Kindle application.
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And yeah, let me backtrack a little bit.
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So I installed KO Reader on my Kindle touch, which is kind of an old one I've had
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for a very long time.
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The number one reason, I actually I first installed KO Reader on the Android.
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And yeah, I was just pretty intrigued with the idea of replacing the stock Kindle firmware
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software with something else that is free, right?
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And something that can read EPUB also would be interesting.
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So then yeah, I finally got around to doing that on my Kindle touch and I have really liked
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it so far.
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So the interface is a little bit different.
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You have some more options about some things and you get to read EPUBs.
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There's no ad at the bottom of the screen.
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And even if you leave Wi-Fi on, there won't be ads in the lock screen.
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Because they're usually are with a regular Kindle, right?
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If you turn on Wi-Fi, Amazon starts sending you their crap and then it shows up on your
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lock screen.
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That's if you paid a little less when you bought your Kindle.
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I don't know if that's still the case with current Kindles.
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I've had this for a really long time.
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So anyway, the thing that John Koch touched on quickly was the Calibre or Calibre.
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I'm not sure how we pronounce that, but he actually let's sort that out first, right?
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We want to take care of that kind of thing.
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So let's see what it says on the Wikipedia article about this application.
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It doesn't say anything.
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So let's just do a duck, duck, go search.
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Bear with me here for a moment.
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Yeah, I don't think I might be able to do this while this here is rolling.
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So let's get, let's forget about this.
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So I'm going to say Calibre.
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So, there's an option in KO reader that says Calibre and then it says connect, right?
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And I was, I actually host a Calibre library on the computer here at home that I access
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when I'm on the wire guard VPN.
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So I first, at first I thought that would be what it would do.
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So I tried that.
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I put in the local network IP and it wouldn't connect.
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So anyway, finally I figured out that it's, and you know, this is probably in their documentation
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in the KO reader documentation, I would imagine.
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So what it's actually talking about is not the, what's called the Calibre content server.
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It's just the wireless device connection.
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So if you go to your Calibre on the little kind of ribbon thing, right?
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As they say in Microsoft application UI terminology, here in the ribbon you have connect slash
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share.
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And then if you open, if you click there, one of the options you'll see right below the
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start content server, which is the one where you start an actual HTTP server to look at
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your library, there's an option to start wireless device connection.
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So you click there, then it'll show you what local IP address is you're connected to
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or as or whatever.
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You can enter an optional password.
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You can also tell it to start this connection automatically when you start Calibre, which
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is what I do.
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It also shows you what port you're on.
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So that's what you want to do.
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So note those that IP address, then put that in as the IP address for your Calibre
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on the KO reader.
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And then when you click connect on the KO reader, you will see your computer will act like
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you just plugged in your e-reader.
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So maybe to some people who don't have a Kindle or have some other device, this is not
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interesting, but yeah, I had never been able to do that before.
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So basically now I can send books to my Kindle without having to plug it into my computer.
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And I think that's nice.
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So then, yeah, so that's that about that feature, about the Calibre feature that John
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called briefly touched on, but he didn't know what it did.
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So that's what I did, that's what I had to offer here.
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I'll say a couple other things that are really good about the KO reader.
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One of them is you can search Wikipedia pretty nicely, even when you're in the middle
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of you're reading a book, you can just highlight some words and then do a search on Wikipedia.
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And in KO reader itself, you can download dictionaries and there's a million options,
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there's kind of too many options to be honest.
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So I scrolled through until I found WordNet dictionary, which is the one used by an EMAX
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package that I use for finding word definitions in buffers.
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So I downloaded that one, it's pretty decent.
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And honestly, you got any dictionary, whatever is not in the dictionary, you're very likely
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to find it on Wikipedia.
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So you pretty well covered there, right?
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So anyway, that was KO reader, really good stuff.
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If you have a candle, I beg you to jailbreak it and install this thing, because it's really
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worth it and you will never have to look at Amazon's face again, all right?
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So thanks for tuning into this one, get a microphone or something, a recorder, and then
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record your own show.
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Whatever has occurred to you today, whatever you've thought about, something you've learned,
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something you've been doing for a long time, you can just get a recorder or something,
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talk about it for a bit and post it, we'll be glad to listen to it, all right?
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And come back tomorrow for another excellent episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts, then click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive,
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and our sync.net.
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Along the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution, 4.0
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International License.
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