Calibre Portable Library Mac Version

  • Latest Version:

    Calibre 4.13.0 (64-bit) LATEST

  • Requirements:

    Windows XP64 / Vista64 / Windows 7 64 / Windows 8 64 / Windows 10 64

  • Author / Product:

    This served as backup but also allowed me to have a exact replica of my iTunes on both the Mac and PC, down to playlists etc.I now want to continue doing this but with the iMac in the mix. Sync iphone to itunes. If I can keep the external HDD in the format it is currently, I can still continue using Sync Toy on the Windows side to get the iTunes folder synced on to the PC and laptop. I'm looking for a app which would allow me to sync the Mac's iTunes folder to my external HDD because I'm using the Mac as my main machine now. Syncing is esential, recoppying the entire folder from 1 HDD to another would take up a lot of time, my iTunes library is over 100 GB, plus it won't be very good for the hard drives to keep deleting and rewriting huge folders on a regular bases.The easyest and most obvious way to do this which everyone all over the internet recommend is via the cloud, Dropbox, Google drive etc, but I currently don't have that much space in the cloud, as mentioned my iTunes library is over 100 GB.Does anyone have a solution or recommendations?Thank you Forum:.User Options.

    Kovid Goyal / Calibre (64-bit)

  • Old Versions:

  • Filename:

    calibre-64bit-4.13.0.msi

  • Details:

    Calibre (64-bit) 2020 full offline installer setup for PC

May 20, 2013  Calibre for Mac is a free program that helps you manage your eBook libraries and create eBooks from other sources for use on portable devices. Manage your eBook library. Apr 30, 2012  Default library in Calibre Portable Library Management. If you just copy the full contents of your existing calibre library folder to the folder that Calibre Portable uses as it's default library then it should come up with the correct contents. In order to show calibre in a different language, open the preferences (by pressing ⌘+P) and select your language. If you are using macOS older than 10.14 (Mojave), the last version of calibre that will work on your machine is 3.48, available here.

Calibre 64-bit is a program to manage your eBook collection. It acts as an e-library and also allows for format conversion, news feeds to eBook conversion, as well as e-book reader sync features and an integrated e-book viewer.
Features and Highlights
Save time on managing your e-book collection
Calibre’s user interface is designed to be as simple as possible. Large buttons in the main window take care of most of your needs. The vast number of calibre’s features and options is always clearly displayed under intuitive tabs. Its context menus are neatly sorted, so the things you’re looking for almost find themselves on their own. You’re never more than three clicks away from your goal. It’s the result of years of tweaking calibre’s interface based on users’ feedback. Plus, you can change many aspects of how the program looks and feels and try one of the three built-in library views to browse your book collection using covers, titles, tags, authors, publishers, etc.
Use it everywhere and with anything
This software supports almost every single e-Reader and is compatible with more devices with every update. You can transfer your e-books from one device to another in seconds, wirelessly or with a cable. And you don’t need any additional tools to do that. The program will send the best file format for your device converting it if needed, automatically.
Comprehensive e-book viewer
This tool has a built-in e-book viewer that can display all the major e-book formats. It has full support for Table of Contents, bookmarks, CSS, a reference mode, printing, searching, copying, multi-page view, embedded fonts, and on and on…
Download news/magazines from the web
Calibre 64bit version can make sure you know what’s happening and automatically deliver stories to your device from hundreds of news sources like The Economist, New York Times, New Yorker Magazine, The Guardian, BBC News, National Geographic, CNN, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The Atlantic, Scientific American, Wired Magazine, The Telegraph, Forbes, Ars Technica…
Share and backup your library easily
The program comes with a handy webserver to host your library. In just a few moments you can safely share all (or just some) of your e-books with anyone you choose or access them yourself from anywhere, using any device you like. With the server, you canread the books in your library on any phone/tablet using just a browser. It even works offline.
Edit the books in your collection
For the e-book nerds amongst you, the software has a built-in editor that allows you to edit e-books in the most popular e-book formats, EPUB and Kindle. The editor has many sophisticated features to make editing the innards of e-books as easy and efficient as possible.
Satisfy every e-book need and get support
It’s unlikely, but if you find out there’s a feature you need but the program lacks it, you can use the built-in plugin explorer. Many users develop plugins to enhance and expand calibre’s features. You can browse through hundreds of plugins directly from the software and install them with just one click.
Also Available: Download Calibre for Mac and Calibre Portable

Calibre Portable Windows 10

Calibre
Original author(s)Kovid Goyal
Initial release31 October 2006; 13 years ago
Stable release4.13[1] (27 March 2020; 5 days ago) [±]
Repository
Written inPython, JavaScript, C++, C
Operating systemWindows, macOS, Linux
PlatformIA-32, x64
Size
  • Windows, IA-32: 60.4 MB
  • Windows, x64: 66.0 MB
  • macOS: 75.4 MB
  • Linux, IA-32: 58.9 MB
  • Linux, x64: 59.4 MB[2]
Typee-book reader, word processor
LicenseGPL v3
Websitecalibre-ebook.com

Calibre (stylised calibre) is a cross-platformopen-source suite of e-book software. Calibre supports organizing existing e-books into virtual libraries, displaying, editing, creating and converting e-books, as well as syncing e-books with a variety of e-readers. Editing books is supported for EPUB and AZW3 formats. Books in other formats like MOBI must first be converted to those formats, if they are to be edited.

History[edit]

On 31 October 2006, when Sony introduced its PRS-500e-reader, Kovid Goyal started developing libprs500, aiming mainly to enable use of the PRS-500 formats on Linux.[3] With support from the MobileRead forums, Goyal reverse-engineered the proprietary Broad Band eBook (BBeB) file format. In 2008, the program, for which a graphical user interface was developed, was renamed 'calibre', displayed in all lowercase.[4]

Features[edit]

Calibre supports many file formats and reading devices. Most e-book formats can be edited, for example, by changing the font, font size, margins, and metadata, and by adding an auto-generated table of contents. Conversion and editing are easily applied to appropriately licensed digital books, but commercially purchased e-books may need to have digital rights management (DRM) restrictions removed. Calibre does not natively support DRM removal, but may allow DRM removal after installing plug-ins with such a function.[5][6]

Calibre allows users to sort and group e-books by metadata fields. Metadata can be pulled from many different sources, e.g., ISBNdb.com; online booksellers; and providers of free e-books and periodicals in the US and elsewhere, such as the Internet Archive, Munsey's Magazine, and Project Gutenberg; and social networking sites for readers, such as Goodreads and LibraryThing). It is possible to search the Calibre library by various fields, such as author, title, or keyword; however as of 2020, full-text search was unimplemented.[7][8]

E-books can be imported into the Calibre library, either by sideloading files manually or by wirelessly syncing an e-book reading device with the cloud storage service in which the Calibre library is backed up, or with the computer on which Calibre resides. Also, online content-sources can be harvested and converted to e-books. This conversion is facilitated by so-called recipes, short programs written in a Python-based domain-specific language. E-books can then be exported to all supported reading devices via USB, Calibre's integrated mail server, or wirelessly. Mailing e-books enables, for example, sending personal documents to the Amazon Kindle family of e-readers and tablet computers.[9][10][11][12]

This can be accomplished via a web browser, if the host computer is running and the device and host computer share the same network; in this case, pushing harvested content from content sources is supported on a regular interval (subscription).[citation needed] Also, if the Calibre library on the host computer is stored in a cloud service, such as Box.net, Google Drive, or Dropbox, then either the cloud service or a third-party app, such as Calibre Cloud or CalibreBox, can be used to remotely access the library.[13][14][15][16][17]

Since version 1.15, released in December 2013, Calibre also contains an application to create and edit e-books directly, similar to the more full-featured Sigil application, but without the latter's WYSIWYG editing mode.[citation needed]

Calibre Library Download

Associated apps[edit]

  • Calibre Cloud (free) and Calibre Cloud Pro (paid), apps by Intrepid Logic that let one 'access your Calibre e-book library from anywhere in the world. Place your calibre library in your Dropbox, Box, or Google Drive folder, and be able to view, search, and download from your library anywhere'.[18] As Jane Litte at Dear Author and John Jeremy at Teleread observe: This tool can be used to 'create [one's] own Cloud of eBooks'[19] and thereby read and allow downloads and emails from one's Calibre library via the Calibre folder in Box.net, Dropbox, or Google Drive. Because the Calibre-generated local wireless feed (OPDS) can only be accessed on devices sharing the same network as the Calibre library, this feature of the Calibre Cloud apps is particularly useful when away from one's home network, because it allows one to download and read the contents of one's Calibre library via the Calibre folder in Box, Dropbox, or Google Drive.[20]
  • Calibre Companion (paid), an app by MultiPie, Ltd., recommended by calibre's developers, 'brings complete integration with calibre on your desktop, giving you total control over book management on your device.'[21] John Jermey at Teleread notes this app can manage Calibre/device libraries as if one's mobile device were plugged into computer; however, unlike Calibre Cloud, Calibre Companion requires users to be at a computer and use the Calibre-generated local wireless feed (OPDS).[20]
  • Calibre Library (paid), an app by Tony Maro that allows one to 'Connect wirelessly to your Calibre e-book library or other Stanza source. Browse and download your e-books on the go.'[22] This app's operations and benefits are similar to those offered by Calibre Cloud.[20]
  • Calibre Sync (free), an app by Seng Jea Lee that 'seamlessly connects to your Calibre Library and shows up as a connected device on Calibre. If Auto-Connect option is enabled, your device will attempt to connect to the Calibre Library when it is within the home Wi-Fi network. This allows Calibre to automatically update your device with the latest newspaper or magazines you have scheduled for download!'[23] As with Calibre Companion, this app requires the device to be on the same network as the Calibre library.
  • CalibreBox (free and paid), an app by Eric Hoffmann that, like Calibre Cloud, accesses Calibre libraries from cloud storage.[24] Unlike Calibre Cloud, it is limited to Dropbox, but CalibreBox supports more than one library at a time, and flexible sorting and filtering. Custom column support for the book detail view, sorting, and filtering by custom columns, and adding more than two libraries are restricted to paid users. The app is built on the design principles of Google's Material Design and is under active development.[25]
  • Calibre-go (free), app by Litlcode Studios lets you access your Calibre e-book library from cloud storage and access the library through Calibre-go to browse, sort, search and read books on your mobile. Calibre-go supports multiple libraries across multiple accounts simultaneously.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'What's new'. 27 March 2020. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  2. ^Goyal, Kovid. 'calibre release (3.10.0)'. calibre-ebook.com. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  3. ^https://en.softonic.com/articles/interview-kovid-goyal-creator-of-calibre
  4. ^'calibre – About'. Calibre-ebook.com. November 2009. Retrieved 2013-07-29.
  5. ^Sorrel, Charlie. 'How To Strip DRM from Kindle E-Books and Others'. Wired.com. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  6. ^Zukerman, Erez (December 28, 2012). 'How To Break The DRM On Kindle eBooks So You Can Enjoy Them Anywhere'. MakeUseOf.
  7. ^'User named kovidgoyal on fulltext search in TODO list'. 2010-08-01.
  8. ^'User named Kovid Goyal (kovid) on fulltext search request'. 2011-05-23.
  9. ^'Transferring Kindle Books to Calibre'. Amazon.com. Archived from the original on 18 October 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  10. ^'About Calibre'. Calibre-ebook.com.
  11. ^Hoffmann, Eric. 'EBook Software: Calibre'. MobileRead Forums.
  12. ^'Featured Tips n Tricks: How to Use Dropbox to store all your ebooks in the cloud'. TouchMyApps. December 5, 2011.
  13. ^Wallen, Jack (February 28, 2011). 'How to Use Calibre to Access Your eBook Collection Online'. TechRepublic.
  14. ^Biba, Paul (February 18, 2010). 'How to Create Your Own Cloud of eBooks with Calibre, Dropbox, and Calibre OPDS'. TeleRead.
  15. ^'Calibre2OPDS'. MobileRead.
  16. ^Slangen, Simon (August 5, 2013). 'How To Manage Your Ebook Collection For The Amazon Kindle With Calibre'. MakeUseOf.
  17. ^Litte, Jane (July 24, 2011). 'Create Your Own Cloud of Ebooks with Calibre + Calibre OPDS..'Dear Author. Retrieved July 24, 2011.
  18. ^'Calibre Cloud'. Google Play. Google, Inc. Archived from the original on 5 April 2016. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  19. ^Litte, Jane. 'Create Your Own Cloud of Ebooks with Calibre + Calibre OPDS..'Dear Author. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  20. ^ abcJermey, John (September 30, 2012). 'Calibre Tools For Your Android Device'. Teleread. Archived from the original on June 18, 2013.
  21. ^'Calibre Companion'. MultiPie. MultiPie, Ltd. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  22. ^Maro, Tony. 'Calibre Library description'. Google Play. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  23. ^Seng, Jea Lee. 'Calibre Sync'. Google Play. Archived from the original on April 11, 2016. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  24. ^Hoffmann, Eric. 'CalibreBox'. Google Play. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  25. ^'CalibreBox – New Cloud-Based App'. MobileRead Forums. Retrieved October 23, 2017.

Further reading[edit]

  • Lachlan, Roy (2012). Managing Your eBooks With Calibre.

External links[edit]

  • Media related to Calibre at Wikimedia Commons
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