

(Well, at least is says it has the default key) but I don't know it's working! I've reopened Calibre in debug mode so I hope this is the right file to include at the bottom.Īm running Windows 10 on my laptop with Calibre 1.17 which I've reverted to with Windows de-drm plugin v 6.5.3 which has the default key for Kindle for Mac/PC's displayed. I have read and tried everything I can find for months, but still, when I open these particular books in Calibre (latest version), it still says they still have DRM. (You can do that trivially by doing xvfb-run ebook-convert….Hi, this is my first post so sorry it's so long but I need to include what I've tried so far.

recipe file as argument.Īlso, if you need PDF output or SVG processing, you need to have Qt installed and (if you’re using a headless server) set up Xvfb or similar. Use ebook-convert -list-recipes to get a list of the built-in recipes or use a custom. Running a built-in recipe from the command line and e-mailing it to your Kindle: ebook-convert "The Economist (RSS)".recipe /tmp/economist.mobiĮcho | mutt -s "The Economist (RSS)" -a /tmp/economist.mobi. It is Python-based and runs on Linux, Mac OS X and Windows, and supports pretty much any e-book reader out there.

This is what it used to look like when I started using it in 2009 (it now looks much better, even if definitely not native under Mac OS X): Calibre is, in the author’s own words, meant to be a complete e-library solution and thus includes library management, format conversion, news feeds to ebook conversion, as well as e-book reader sync features and an integrated e-book viewer.
