The latest version of Kindle for Mac can be used on any Mac computer running OS X 10.9.5 or higher. The latest version of Kindle for Mac, 1.23, includes the following: • New Fonts - We’ve added six new fonts (Caecilia, Palatino, Baskerville, Helvetica, Helvetica Light, and Lucida) in the Aa (Fonts) menu.
Kindle & Kindle Paperwhite: Find MAC Address. By Mitch Bartlett 1 Comment. Select the “Menu” button again. The “Wi-Fi MAC Address” is located toward the bottom of the screen in the “Device Info” section. Note: If this field shows “MAC Address not available“, you may have to connect to a Wi-Fi. Using and quite enjoying the Kindle App on my HTC Evo, I thought it might not be a bad idea to grab it for OS X when I saw it on the new Mac App Store. I was quickly disappointed to find, however, that I could not copy text from within my books! After a minute or two of finagling I came up with a fairly.
• New Column Reading Options - You can now choose to read with one-column view, two-column view, or multi-column view. • We’ve added a viewer for images, math equations, and footnotes – You can now enlarge and view images, mathml (mathematical markup language), and footnotes.
• Double-click images and math equations to open them in the viewer. To view and enlarge a footnote, tap the desired footnote. To close the viewer, use the exit icon in the upper right corner of the viewer window. • Split Screen Support - You can now split your screen to read while using other applications on your Mac running Mac OS X 10.11 or above. • Improved support for Magic Mouse gestures. • General performance improvements.
To confirm that your app is operating on the latest version, select Kindle, then About Kindle on your Kindle for Mac app. Note: Kindle for Mac applications running a software version below 1.14.0 are no longer supported. To continue reading on your app you can easily download and install for free the latest version of the Kindle for Mac.
If you are running an operating system that is not compatible with our app, you may continue reading from your computer with.
See also: • • There is, however, one factor that makes it impossible. It’s the file size limit. The size limit of the file emailed to Kindle is being caused by two factors: • attachment size limit of your email provider – for instance, for Gmail the limit is 25 MB, • size limit on the Amazon side – Amazon won’t accept personal files bigger than 50 MB.
There is a growing number of ebooks that are packed with pictures and multimedia, and therefore are much larger than 50 MB. Cookbooks, picture books or graphic novels are making their way to e-readers and book reading apps.
And, of course, Kindle Store is not the only source of them. More and more ebook vendors offer books in mobi – the file format supported by Kindle. Even if ebook platforms provide the function to send the purchased file to the Kindle automatically, it won’t happen in the case of ebooks exceeding the accepted size of the outgoing email. How to send large files to the Kindle or Kindle application? Luckily, there is more than one way of doing it.
You can pick up the one that suits you most. For the purpose of clarity, we’ve grouped the guide in three sections: • • • There is one more thing you have to keep in mind.
The 50 MB is the maximum size of the personal file that will be added to your Kindle cloud library. Kindle cloud library is the archive of all your books you ever purchased in the Kindle Store or sideloaded.
The books are available to download to any of the connected Kindle devices or apps and their content can be synced. Any file larger than 50 MB can be added directly to the Kindle e-reader or Kindle app, but can’t be backed to Kindle cloud library, and therefore you won’t access it from any other device. There is another way to cope with the problem. The solution is to reduce the size of the file.