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Full Discussion: Do You Own a Kindle?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Do You Own a Kindle? Post 302503273 by radoulov on Thursday 10th of March 2011 05:40:02 AM
Old 03-10-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by varelg
I don't own a Kindle but a similar device (Nook) and am disappointed on how it renders pdf's which is why I bought it. I am not convinced that Kindle would do a better job, maybe the Sony 950 and am generaly disappointed in how eReaders are horrible at handling pdf's, so I don't plan to get another one very soon.
Now, that was my primary concern before purchasing a Kindle.
Yes, I believe most of the eBook readers (having display < 7") render the pdf format the same way.

I found an acceptable (not a perfect) solution:
I send the pdf to Amazon for a free conversion (you receive the converted file via email, not via Wispernet!) and I loose a small part of the original formatting.

You could also use Modipocket Reader (free software) and the result is similar (I find it a bit worse, than the Amazon conversion).

I can display the pdf files nicely (without loosing any formatting) on my 7" tablet, but Kindle's e Ink technology is far better for me.
 

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RDS-GEN-SINK(1) 					    BSD General Commands Manual 					   RDS-GEN-SINK(1)

NAME
rds-gen -- write data from a file to an RDS socket rds-sink -- write data from an RDS socket to a file SYNOPSIS
rds-gen [-s source_address:source_port] [-d destination_address:destination_port] [-f input_file] [-m message_size] [-l total_bytes] [-i interval] rds-sink [-s listen_address:listen_port] [-f output_file] [-i interval] DESCRIPTION
The rds-gen and rds-sink utilities are used to stream data through RDS sockets. rds-gen reads data from a file descriptor and sends it as messages down an RDS socket. rds-sink receives messages from an RDS socket and writes it to a file descriptor. The following options are shared between rds-gen and rds-sink: -s address:port Binds the RDS socket to the given address and port. rds-gen will send messages from this address and port. rds-sink will receive messages sent to this address and port. -f file rds-gen will read data from this file and rds-sink will write data to this file. If '-' is given as the filename then rds-gen will use standard input and rds-sink will use standard output. -i interval_seconds An iterative summary of the number and size of messages that are sent and received is written to standard error at this interval. In addition, rds-gen supports the following options: -d address:port Messages are sent to this destination address and port. If this option is specified multiple times then the messages are sent to each destination address in a round-robin fashion. -m message_size Specifies the size of the messages that are sent down the RDS socket. The default message size is 4k. The message size must not be greater than the buffer size. -l total_bytes Specifies the number of bytes that will be sent out the socket before rds-gen exits. If this is not specified and rds-gen was given a source file then it will run until it gets EOF from the file. If no file was given and this option is not specified then rds-gen will send data indefinitely. EXAMPLES
rds-gen on host src sends infinite data to rds-sink on dest who prints out the amount of data it receives every second. $ rds-sink -s dest:22222 -i 1 $ rds-gen -s src:11111 -d dest:22222 Read 100M from /dev/zero on src and write it to /dev/null on dest, printing stats on both sides every minute. $ rds-sink -s dest:22222 -f /dev/null -i 60 $ rds-gen -s src:11111 -f /dev/zero -d dest:22222 -i 60 Watch rds-gen write data as fast as it can into a local black hole because there is no bound receiving socket. $ rds-gen -s src:11111 -d localhost:31337 -i 1 BSD
October 30, 2006 BSD
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