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Can you describe what motivated you to build an ebook reader for the browser, when multiple free desktop and mobile book readers exist?

Also, do I need to keep the screen open if I want to save my place in my book? It doesn't seem to save my book or my location when I reload the page.



Not the OP, but I find Calibre burdensomely heavy for what I want, and Okular far too glitchy. Also, sometimes I am at PCs where I can't install arbitrary software.

I think we still need far more/better solutions in the open source e-reading space.


I can't speak for the creator but I often read Japanese ebooks in my browser because it allows me to lookup unfamiliar words quickly with Yomichan and then create anki cards for them (if I want to).


A bit OOT but how do you transfer Yomichan to anki cards? Do you do it manually?


It's a built in feature using Ankiconnect.


Have you tried calibre? It’s a proper ebook reader app that allows you to define custom dictionary URL patterns.


I use Calibre daily, but for epub > dictionary > anki card there isn't a good workflow I've found.


> multiple free desktop and mobile book readers exist

Under many circumstances, some I've been in, none of those are an option, and a browser is all you've got.


>> when multiple free desktop and mobile book readers exist

Do you know a good list of available readers? I still searching for the one which fit for me. This one could be a good candidate after some polish.




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