

A Refined Grip and PerformanceĮbook reader owners tend to like the restfulness and physicality of books, but less expensive models have been paring away at the physical buttons that bind them to their physical counterparts and moving toward touch screens. But for everyone else, the $139.99 Kindle Paperwhite is our Editors' Choice winner. If you're looking for a non-Kindle ebook reader, the Libra 2 is definitely the one to get. We'd like to see Kobo open up the device’s Bluetooth features, however, with support for audiobooks outside of the company's own selection. As with other Kobo readers we’ve reviewed, we like how the Libra 2 supports more formats and works more seamlessly with public libraries than Amazon's Kindles. The Libra 2’s improvements over its predecessor, the Libra H2O, aren't groundbreaking, but a better handgrip, an updated display, and USB-C charging are all welcome changes. Kobo's $179.99 Libra 2 is the latest device in its lineup of ebook readers with physical page-turn buttons. How to Set Up Two-Factor Authentication.How to Record the Screen on Your Windows PC or Mac.How to Convert YouTube Videos to MP3 Files.How to Save Money on Your Cell Phone Bill.How to Free Up Space on Your iPhone or iPad.How to Block Robotexts and Spam Messages.Kobo Forma syncs and retrieves books from Calibre-webĪccess via nginx reverse proxy with Let's Encrypt certificate.


Enable Kobo Sync in Calibre-web and generate token.The books are not able to finish downloading, and interrupting the sync process and trying to re-download the books on the Kobo Forma results in the same loop. After enabling Kobo sync in Calibre-web and editing the Kobo configuration file as per the instructions in the Wiki, syncing the Kobo (Forma) results in retrieving the title and cover of the books from calibre-web, however the Kobo Forma remains remains on "Updating books", while the number of books that the device lists under "My Books" appears to grow indefinitely.
