I am slowly getting back into reading, and as a minimalist, I dislike the idea of having (or carrying) books, aside from very special ones, of course.

Is there a nice system to organize (maybe even sync) ebook information; and I mean not only bookmarking where you left, but actually notes, highlights, etc? I'd like it to be pretty "universal", so I don't depend on propietary stuff, and I can retrieve those notes 20 years from now (why else would I want to write some notes, right?).

Also, a bit off-topic for this sub, but... how do you read? E-readers? Tablets? Software choices?

  • everett@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I use Calibre to store and manage my library, and then serve it to KOReader clients on four devices. There are two ways to serve books from Calibre to KOReader but I prefer the "content server" approach where Calibre runs a server that I can browse from within KOReader. (The other approach, "wireless device connection," lets KOReader show up as a device you can drag-and-drop books to from within Calibre, but comes with limitations.)

    When I start a new book I manually download it to each device and let KOReader's progress sync plugin store my reading progress across devices. Highlights and bookmarks don't sync between devices, but there's cross-platform desktop software called KoHighlights that I use to merge my highlights when I'm done reading a book, then I keep the merged version on my desktop KOReader library and delete the book from my other three devices. Other options for long-term storage would be using KOHighlights to export the merged highlights to plain text, HTML, CSV or Markdown, or using KOReader's built-in functionality to export notes to a Joplin notebook (or a number of other formats). I know there's also a way to send the highlights back to Calibre, and I did get this working at some point, but I remember it either being hassle or not working well.

    KOReader also has a way of saving highlights directly into PDFs (and only PDF files, I believe), and I think this is the default, but it's something I've disabled.

  • nobloat@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I've written a hacky Bash script that exports my kindle notes and highlights of selected books as a text file. By default kindle lumps everything in one file and it's such a mess

  • birdcat@lemmy.ml
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    edit-2
    1 year ago

    after reading hearing of studies that came to the conclusion that highlighting and adding notes is for nothing, I try to form the habit to summerize thoughts in my own words; and for fiction books write a short review after reading it.

  • marcuse1w@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Not a perfect fit but Firefox can annotate PDFs out of the box. Maybe in some cases that is helpful ?