![]() So if there's a problem emailing a book to AMZ to in turn be available for download to your Kindle (or whatever) I suspect the problem may lie in the file format, rather than where it's going to be stored. Touch : AZW, TXT, PDF, MOBI (unprotected), PRC (original version), HTML, DOC, DOCX, JPEG, GIF, PNG and BMP (by conversion). ![]() ![]() These tools are free and can be used to take content in a wide variety of formats and convert it into Mobipocket (MOBI) files. Kindle 4: AZW, TXT, PDF, MOBI (unprotected), PRC (original version), HTML, DOC, DOCX, JPEG, GIF, PNG, BMP (BY CONVERSION). ![]() There is a file folder called "documents" and I suspect the word is used because you can read PDFs on your Kindle and PDFs are not statistically likely to be books, though that is, of course possible.Įverything I've ever seen in any of the Kindle "document" folders is something to do with ebook formats, either mobi, or the extension used by AMZ (azw3 or something now?), and associated tiny files I have no understanding at all about. Mobipocket Creator: Available only for PCs, Mobipocket Creator can convert e-books from DOC, TXT, and PDF files to Kindle-compatible MOBI format. Just a thought: I'm not sure that AMZ saves anything as a file-type called "documents." With every Kindle I have ever had, when you plug it into your computer with a USB cable, it becomes another hard drive, albeit external. Dee wrote: "that is just how amazon deals with documents sent to the account - they are saved as documents, not books - it is something that they would have to address"
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