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message 1:
by
Lisa
(new)
Jul 05, 2015 06:56PM

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The other way is right under that and is a little more complicated because you will need to download the book and then send it to your kindle device. Each device, including the PC viewer, has a direct email under the 'about' section. You would need to email it to that address. There may be an easier way on the PC, but I have yet to find one.

I was trying to figure out how to get it 'into' the app so it showed up like a book.

Download and install MOBI Pocket Reader. When you make your review books, make sure it doesn't have Digital Rights Management checked. Drag and drop the book into the reader. Doubleclick on the icon. Read.

Sounds like you're talking about the Kindle app for PC. And, yeah, that's all you need to do. I believe when you double click on a .mobi file anywhere on your system, it will open in that app, but it will also place a copy of it in the My Documents/Libraries/Kindle Content folder (something like that).
If you want to check to see how your .mobi would look in different Kindle versions, though, you might want to look at Kindle Previewer (http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html...).
It's "a graphical user interface tool that emulates how books display across Kindle devices and apps."
If you also install KindleGen (http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html...) then the Previewer will also let you convert HTML and XML documents (like .opf files), as well as ePub files to KF8 and Mobi formats.
You just have to make sure you follow the install directions for KindleGen to the letter to make that work. Don't ever launch KindleGen by itself unless you're an old school command prompt addict. If you don't know what that is...just don't open it. He, he.

Actually, that's how I ran KindleGen to create the .mobi. Is there another way? LOL


Actually, that's how I ran KindleGen to create the .mobi. Is there another way? LOL"
Yes. There's Kindle Previewer!
Nice thing there is you just tell it where your file is and press convert. It tells you if there are warnings or errors, and if it converts then it automatically opens it in a preview view. Then you can look at it in whatever Kindle device format you like and you can forget that there is even such a thing as a command prompt!

Convert & view in one process: two for the price of one.

Convert & view in one process: two for the price of one."
Any thoughts on whether the fact that you have to scroll down to see the bottom of the page for Fire HDX is a concern?