I assumed everyone was using Calibre, but recent searches suggest that isn’t always the case
Honest question. Why host them? Finishing one book can take a while and they are incredibly small.
I just use calibre and sync with my e reader and phone occasionally.
Download whenever I feel like it. Share them.
I do the same thing. I’ve tried Kavita and Audiobookshelf and ended up just keeping the books on a network share and then accessing them through Calibre. I am sideloading to a Kindle though.
You can use calibre-web to send to your Kindle email. They will appear in the Kindle as “Documents”
For me (I use Kavita) it’s because I want to be able to just pick up whatever device is in front of me at the moment and pick up the book where I last left off even if it was on another device
Syncing progress seems like a very good reason for hosting. I didn’t think of that.
Thanks!
Because I have a really cool library and it should all be kept in a centralised place
I’m using Calibre-Web
This is the right answer. I have dockerized Calibre and Calibre-Web for initial intake, then use Calibre-Web’s OPDS feed with my Moon+ Android app for reading on my tablet/phone.
Calibre handles type conversions, metadata sync, and file organization.
Calibre-Web works well for browser reading on my PC.
Same here. My Kobo Libre 2 syncs with it over Wifi. It’s nice.
Calibre for my Kobo, Librera FD on my phone.
I tried Kavita but it didn’t have the features I needed. I ended up just throwing them on Nextcloud and using Nextcloud sync onto my reader (Box Air 3c)
What features did you need?
I am using Calibre-Web mostly - but I have run into issues with thumbnail generation after my collection hit around 500000 books. I am just over 600000 now, but a large swathe don’t have thumbnails unless I do a manual metadata search. I should probably look for an alternative, but at this point I CBF.
Over half a million books? I’m so envious!
Jellyfin lol