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How to Find Free e-Books and Free Content for your Kindle
How to Find Free e-Books and Free Content for your Kindle
How to Find Free e-Books and Free Content for your Kindle
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How to Find Free e-Books and Free Content for your Kindle

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Everything You Need to Feed Your Kindle With the Best Content, Free! The First Complete Kindle Guide to Quality Free Content For Kindle Users In a single, concise but detailed practical book all the tips and advice you'll ever need to deliver the best content of your choice on your Kindle reader. Three Invaluable Strategies To Fill Your Kindle Reader With Your Favorite Content: Web Article and News, Books and More. A Guide to Collect and Read Web Content Offline Grab Web articles,Wikipedia pages, Blog and News Feeds and send them automatically to your Kindle reader for offline reading, formatted for the most comfortable reading experience just like any ebook! A Guide to Finding Any Free Book Available on Amazon and Other Sources Learn how to spot the best free ebooks available for your Kindle both on the Amazon website and other great websites in any category you want, and keep updated on new freebies daily so you don't miss a chance! A Guide to Convert Any Book and File in the Standard Kindle Format Discover and use all the best resources and tools to convert any file format to the native Kindle one: not just ePub or PDF, convert any old and new digital book and document format to your Kindle quickly and easily!
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 6, 2016
ISBN9788822853271
How to Find Free e-Books and Free Content for your Kindle
Author

Andy Jackson

Andy is a fairly decent, slightly eccentric and mildly humorous chap. He is in a band that has spectacularly failed to get any public recognition. There is a rumour that he competitively cycles but is basically rubbish. When asked what is your favourite football team, he replies, “The Toronto Maple Leafs.” He tries to right the ills of society to the best of his inept ability. He enjoys going on holiday with his wife who is a great companion as well as a fantastic wife and mother.

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    How to Find Free e-Books and Free Content for your Kindle - Andy Jackson

    You!

    Introduction

    Whether you’re using a Kindle device (reader or tablet) or a Kindle software application for a mobile or desktop device, this guide provides all you need to know to build a rich and useful Kindle library made of ebooks, web content and other documents and information, all for free (except for a couple of commercial software tools which I’ve added for extra choice).

    The information you’ll find here is particularly suited for Kindle products based on e-ink technology or Kindle apps for mobile devices, since Kindle Fire models ( based on the Android operating system and thus able to host and use apps) have many more ways to access a large part of the services and options described here. In fact, some of the tools I’m going to talk about have an app version for mobile operating systems like Android or iOS. This doesn’t mean that what you’re going to read won’t be useful if you’ve got a Kindle Fire tablet instead of an e-ink Kindle reader: the basic concepts apply in both cases, and everything else can be adapted for the Amazon tablet using related apps, if available.

    There are, in fact, several free sources and tools that allow you to collect books, reports, documents, news and articles and send them to your Kindle, either using a wireless connection or the usual USB cable. In this guide I’ve tried to select, organize and explain the best and most useful among them. You will find more detailed and updated information on my website, and I’ll include them in new versions of this guide.

    As a technical journalist and writer, during the past 30 years I’ve been testing and experimenting with all sort of digital documents using a plethora of formats and software applications on several machines and operating systems. I used to read ebooks on home and personal computers in the 80s and on portable devices in the 90s, followed by the first breed of smartphones, long before ebook readers and tablets were launched. Throughout the years, an ongoing concern has been how to convert from one format to another the ebooks and other documents I had collected in order to read them on new devices and platforms. When the Internet evolved, I continued my search for better solutions.

    I’m also a long time reader of traditional books and an Amazon customer since their first website was launched. Besides the hundreds of printed books I’ve purchased, my digital Kindle library currently contains more than 6000 (yes, six thousand) titles, most of which have been ‘purchased’ for free or converted from other ebook formats. In this guide, then, I’ll show you how to collect free ebooks and how to effectively convert the existing ones you may already have in formats different from the regular Kindle ones (MOBI and AZW).

    Please take a minute to read the last chapter and send me your feedback through my website/blog. I’ll do my best to improve the language, style and content of this guide, with a little help from my readers who share with me the passion and love for the beautiful Kindle reader.

    Visit my website at bestfreekindlecontent.com and feel free to comment, criticize and support this guide so we can improve our Kindle experience together, and keep improving it.

    Andy Jackson

    Preface – How to create your send-to-Kindle email address

    If you don’t have a send-to-Kindle email address already, this is a vital step to make use of the many tools I’m going to describe in the following pages, so let me explain it before anything else in this preface. To create a send-to-Kindle email address, though, you must first register your Kindle from the device itself, or from the Kindle app if you’re using the software version of the reader on a tablet, smartphone or computer. This will allow you to set up a send-to-Kindle email address through your Kindle account on Amazon’s website.

    If you’ve already registered your device or app, then sign-in to your Amazon

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