Thread: Kindle Scribe
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Old 04-23-2024, 04:15 PM   #4
tomsem
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Posts: 6,494
Karma: 26425959
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: USA
Device: iPhone 15PM, Kindle Scribe, iPad mini 6, PocketBook InkPad Color 3
Quote:
Originally Posted by Strether View Post
If you have a Mac, and have a large Calibre library, it takes a while for Calibre to recognize the books on the Scribe and allow you to transfer books. I have 2,000+ books and there are sometimes problems. Kovid told me that that was too many books to have on the device, so I've been deleting books that I know it's unlikely that I'll read again.

It's a great e-reader otherwise, though, with fantastic battery life.

Jim
I think it is more an issue with number of books you keep on the Scribe, not the size of calibre library. I typically keep no more than a couple of dozen on Scribe, while my calibre library has nearly 5,000 books in it. It connects and syncs very quickly for me, a least when I only have a handful of items side-loaded.

But for the most part I do not side-load at all with Kindles, so I have no idea how performance degrades if you are putting hundreds of books there with calibre. It's just not something I have any desire to do with Kindles; I use Send To Kindle to add them to my Kindle library, and confine downloads to the handful of books I'm currently reading on that particular device (or Kindle app).

I have recently been doing experiments with MTP on my Scribe trying to figure out what it takes to add thumbnails to content (both side loaded and downloaded personal documents) that lack them.

When connecting, the MTP client downloads a directory which maps an integer value to each item (file or folder). You cannot do anything without having this directory, and these values change between connection sessions. And the more items there are, the longer it takes to get this directory.

Calibre caches and updates the directory as changes are made, so adding or removing operations after initial sync are fast. It's possible the initial sync could be optimized more than it is, and scale up better when hundreds of books are side-loaded (or downloaded), but I would need to study to see what calibre is actually doing.

I would also note (from my thumbnails investigation) that system/thumbnails caches a file for every thumbnail downloaded, whether it be from downloaded content, downloaded as you browse Kindle library, or for the items Amazon chooses to show you on Home view. It does not take much storage, but for MTP it will bloat the size of the directory that MTP client has to download before it can do any file transfers.

So it should help to periodically delete the contents of the folder and let it have clean slate (sync should restore thumbnails for downloaded content). I think my Scribe probably has 2 or 3 thousand files in there, easily the largest share of any folder in terms of number of items.

Last edited by tomsem; 04-23-2024 at 04:25 PM.
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