mcostas said:
I have just downloaded calibre and am also having some problems. I can see the library on my device, but I cannot back the data up on my computer. I thought the calibre library would be where all my kindle books are. I can open the books on my computer with the kindle attached, and that' all well and good, but I thought it was going to let me store the data on my computer or something.
I am confused as to what the purpose of calibre is. I decided to download it because I thought I could more easily convert a word document to a kindle friendly format without emailing. I can't seem to figure that out either.
Calibre will convert non-DRM material to and from various formats. As I recall, it does not accept DOC format, but it will accept RTF, ODT, or HTML formats.
If your books have DRM (Digital Rights Management) the Calibre will not convert those files without optional (and possibly illegal to use) plugins. The DRM means the books will only open on the device they were encoded for at the time of purchase. If you buy the books from Amazon, for instance, a downloaded file will only work on your Kindle, if that what it was downloaded to. You can download the book to other devices, but they will still only work on the one they were downloaded to.
You can transfer the books to Calibre for backup, but they will still only work on the reader they were downloaded for. Connect the Kindle to your computer, wait a few moments for it to connect, and then click on the Device icon in the menu and select Show books in device main menu (or something like that). Any book/document on it will show up in the listing window with a green check mark in the right-hand column. Highlight the entry and click on "Add books".
You might want to drop by the Calibre forum mentioned a few posts back for more info, or visit the Calibre web site and view the video that is a good introduction to Calibre's purpose.
Mike