Kobos are fantastic. I don’t think they took off outside of Canada unfortunately.
Last time I was at Value Village I saw a handful of them for $5 each. I picked up a couple of them and turned one into a weather station[0]. Took under 5 minutes including mounting it.
I just wonder how compatible the firmwares are. Haven't found anything about flashing Kobo firmware (Tolinos use Android) on Tolino devices, so all the cool hacks may not be feasible :(
ddns.net is a home-IP address masking service which means maybehttps://inkbox.ddns.net/git/explore will still be alive in an hour, maybe not. Thus, one can certainly take their chances with the home-hosted gitlab instance or take their chances with GitHub's availability
If you want a hackable e-reader, I have loved the Remarkable tablet. It's definitely more of a "writing" than a "reading" tablet although it works great with pdfs and epubs. Even lets you "write" notes on top of them!
It's not all open source though. They will give you access to the device and you can fairly easily move files on and off, but the app is proprietary.
Both Kobos and Kindles are very hackable. On the older Kindles (not sure about the newer ones) the included shell scripts and JavaScript files are even (pretty well) commented. It's a standard (apart from upstart) X11/Awesome WM/GTK2 stack.
This is the sort of thing I badly want in my life, but the sad reality is that Amazon has a massive ~monopoly~ grip on most of the e publishing market. Most of the books I want to buy only have a electronic version for Kindle.
Being able to strip the DRM so I can read on non-Kindle devices is a major cat and mouse game and it's majorly frustrating to have a solution worked out only to have it break the next time I buy a book. Has anybody had continuing success with this?
Just buy the eBook from Amazon. Then download the DRM-free version of the same ebook from pirate sites (Russian pirate sites are a good resource for this). Enjoy a guilt-free, drm-free experience of reading ebooks.
This looks nice! I wonder if it supports Overdrive? My kobo device is strictly a frontend to the local library; it would be nice to have firmware which wasn't constantly trying to sell me things.
Last time I was at Value Village I saw a handful of them for $5 each. I picked up a couple of them and turned one into a weather station[0]. Took under 5 minutes including mounting it.
[0]: https://github.com/brunolalb/yawk