Kindle Reader For Mac Wants Me To Re Register It

Kindle lovers, beware: there’s a mandatory update to your beloved e-reader, and if you don’t install it by March 22, you’re going to end up with a blank slate. The update is necessary for. My kindle wants me to de register it states registered user Janie Craig device name Janie's kindle Electronics Technician: Cris, Technician replied 6 years ago Deregister the Kindle. Too Many Devices. You're limited to how many devices can access the books your Kindle account -- if there wasn't a limit, all your friends could link up their devices and read your books. This includes modern Kindle eReaders and Kindle Fire devices, as well as Kindle apps for iPhone, iPad, Android, Windows 8, Mac, and the web. However, this option may not be enabled by default, so you’re not done yet. It’s actually easier to just buy the book from your browser on your Mac and have it sent directly to your iPad. Rollback Post to Revision RollBack To post a comment, please login or register a new account. If you're jailbreaking a Kindle 3, select 'k3w' for the Wi-Fi-only version, 'k3g' for the US 3G model or 'k3gb' for the UK 3G blend. If you want to restore your Kindle back to proprietary.

  1. Kindle Reader For Mac Wants Me To Re Register Itouch
  2. Kindle Reader For Mac Wants Me To Re Register Itunes
  3. Kindle Reader For Mac Wants Me To Re Register Items
  4. Kindle Reader For Mac Wants Me To Re Register Itax
899,275
Contains Ads
READ ANYTIME, ANYWHERE
On the bus, on your break, in your bed—never be without a book. Built for book lovers, the Kindle app puts millions of books, magazines, newspapers, comics, and manga at your fingertips.
FIND YOUR NEXT GREAT READ
- Find your next great read with Kindle. Choose from over six million Kindle books (including those with Audible narration), magazines, audiobooks, and comics and start reading in seconds. Explore new releases, Amazon Charts best sellers, and titles across genres like romance, science fiction, children’s books, self-help, religion, nonfiction, and more—and try any book before you buy with a free sample.
- Subscribe to Kindle Unlimited to enjoy unlimited reading and listening. Explore over 1 million titles, thousands of audiobooks, and current magazines for just $9.99 a month.
- Over 1,000 books, magazines, comics, and more included with Amazon Prime.
- With Kindle Daily Deals, save up to 80% on a new selection of books every day, including romance, science fiction, non-fiction, and books for young readers.
GO BEYOND PAPER
Turn your phone or tablet into a book with the free Kindle app—so you can read anytime, anywhere. Explore these reading features in the Kindle app:
- Read your way. Customize your text size, font type, margins, text alignment, and orientation (portrait or landscape)—and choose whether to turn pages from left to right or continuously scroll. Read comfortably day and night with adjustable brightness and background colors. Go to the Aa menu in your book to get started.
- Look up words, people, and places while you read. Breeze through words you don’t know and characters you can’t remember with the built-in dictionary, X-Ray, Wikipedia lookup, instant translations, and search within your book. Simply tap and hold a word to view its definition, or use the Google and Wikipedia links to get more information.
- Track your reading progress. See what percent of the book you’ve read, real page numbers (for most top titles), and how much time you have left in the chapter or book based on your actual reading speed.
- Bookmark places you want to revisit, and make highlights and take notes throughout your book. Open My Notebook to see all your notes in the same place.
- Hop, skim, and jump with Page Flip. Flip between pages or get a bird’s-eye view of your book with Page Flip—don’t worry, we’ll save your place.
- Zoom in on high-definition color images in Kindle books, magazines, comics, and manga.
- Sync your books across devices. When you’re reading a book, the Kindle app will automatically sync where you left off—along with any bookmarks, highlights, or notes—so you can start reading on one device and pick up where you left off on another.
- When you can’t read, listen. Switch seamlessly from reading your Kindle book to listening to the Audible book, all within the Kindle app.
- Get notified when authors you love have new releases, or when books you’re interested in go on deal.
Collapse
899,275 total
4
2
Read more
Kindle Reader For Mac Wants Me To Re Register Itouch

If someone says “access your books from any device”, they assume you understand it as “any device you own”:

  • your own Kindle e-reader,
  • your mobile device with a Kindle app installed,
  • your computer with a Kindle app installed.

Kindle Cloud Reader is the missing part. You don’t need to have any of your devices with you, to access your Kindle books.

In fact, you don’t need to own any device at all. Any computer in a public space, like a library or internet café, is enough to access the books stored in your Kindle cloud.

Find the computer, open the browser, and go to read.amazon.com url address. Sign in with your Amazon credentials. That’s it. Under the Cloud tab you’ll see all books you bought in the Kindle Store.

Note: make sure to log out from your Amazon account before leaving the public computer.

2. It’s available for Kindle users around the world

Kindle Cloud Reader was launched in August 2011. At that time it was available only for Kindle users registered in Amazon.com.

Now, the web-based Kindle app is available globally, including users of localized Kindle Stores (UK, Germany, France, or India, to name the few).

No matter which Kindle Store you’re logged in, you can access your books in a web browser – from anywhere in the world.

The pattern for url address is the same in all Kindle Stores – type “read” before the domain of your local Amazon site. Here are the examples:

  • Kindle Store UK – read.amazon.co.uk
  • Kindle Store Italy – read.amazon.it
  • Kindle Store India – read.amazon.in
  • Kindle Store Canada – read.amazon.ca

Users from countries, where localized Kindle Stores were launched, may have two accounts: one for Amazon.com, and one for the local Amazon site. This might be the source of confusion.

Some users expect they could access the Kindle books from both accounts. That’s not possible.

Example. If you live in Germany, when you sign in with Amazon.com credentials, you’ll see only the books bought in the American Kindle Store. To see the books bought in Kindle Store Germany, you’ll have to sign out from Amazon.com, and sign in with Amazon.de credentials.

3. You can’t add and read your personal files

Usually, users can add personal documents to the connected Kindle device or app, by sending them to a special email address. They can also download these personal documents from the Kindle cloud to particular Kindle apps.

However, this useful feature is not available in:

  • Kindle Cloud Reader
  • Kindle for PC
  • Kindle for Mac

In other words, when you open Cloud tab in the Kindle Cloud Reader, you’ll only see the books purchased from the Kindle Store.

This is the major disadvantage of the Kindle Cloud Reader. Amazon just doesn’t want users to treat Kindle Cloud Reader as a web-based reader of mobi ebook files downloaded from other sites.

I don’t think Amazon will enable an option to add and manage personal files in the Kindle Cloud Reader any time soon.

If you are looking for ways to read free books online, the best option is to go for any app that supports epub format, not mobi.

Adding own files to Google Play Books, associated with your Gmail account, is the easiest possible way. Plus Google offers inline translation in a web-based Google Books app.

Another option to read epub files on the web are browser extensions, naming only Readium or Magic Scroll.

Kindle Reader For Mac Wants Me To Re Register Itunes

4. You can add and read free books from the Kindle Store

The good news is that you can add to the Kindle Cloud Reader any free book found in the Kindle Store. It could be:

  • a book from Top 100 Free Kindle Titles,
  • a book listed in Free Popular Classics section,
  • a free sample of any Kindle book.

Simply, go to a page with book details, double-check whether the Kindle price is displayed as $0.00. Then, from the green widget on the right, under “Deliver to”, select Kindle Cloud Reader, and hit Buy button.

You don’t need to send the book directly to Kindle Cloud Reader to access it.

Once you add it to any of your Kindle devices or apps, it automatically gets stored in your Kindle cloud library. That means you can access it from any other app connected with your Kindle account.

When you sign in to Kindle Cloud Reader for the first time, you’ll see all the titles from your Kindle cloud library under the Cloud tab.

5. Get Kindle books for offline reading

By default, only a few books that you are currently reading are being downloaded to your browser, so even if for a short while you lose an internet connection, you’ll still be able to access them.

You can, however, decide which Kindle books you want on your computer for offline reading. To enable this option, click on Downloaded tab on the top (see screenshot).

Click on Enable Offline button. By doing so, you are in fact downloading a Kindle Cloud Reader web app, that will let you manage stored books in the browser’s memory.

The offline mode is available for major internet browsers, including Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and even Internet Explorer. You can read detailed installation instructions on this page.

To download the book to the browser, simply right-click (PC) or control-click (Mac) on a book cover, and select Download & Pin Book option from a drop-down menu.

Once the book is downloaded, you will see it under the Downloaded tab. It’s also marked with a green pin under the cover.

6. A way to copy your Kindle highlights

Kindle Cloud Reader offers very basic features: highlights, notes, or search within a book.

Just like in other Kindle apps there is no way to make highlights editable. But Cloud Reader has one advantage over the rest – you can copy the highlights without leaving the web browser.

Once you highlight the text, it is automatically added to your Kindle activity account that you can reach in the web browser at kindle.amazon.com.

With a couple of minutes of delay, all the highlights appear in Your Highlights section. From here, you can copy the highlights to whatever app you want.

Imagine you’re going to the library. You don’t have to grab your own computer there. One of the library’s computers is enough to work with texts from various sources.

Open Kindle Cloud Reader in one tab, Kindle highlights in the next, and in the third tab you’ll have a Google Docs text document in which you write your book, essay or blog post.

7. Access two Kindle accounts at the same time

Earlier, I used an example of a German user, who has accounts in both the US and German Kindle Store. This may happen when someone decides not to migrate the Kindle account from US to a local one.

In this case, some books are available through one and some through the other account. Not convenient at all.

Kindle Cloud Reader can be really helpful here. Let’s say, you are using the Mac laptop. In the Kindle for Mac app you can login with Amazon.com credentials, and in the Kindle Cloud Reader on Safari, you can use Amazon.de.

What’s more, you don’t even need to download the Kindle application at all, if you only use on your Mac any other browser than Safari. Use Safari for one account, and the other browser for the other one.

Kindle Reader For Mac Wants Me To Re Register Items

Kindle reader for mac wants me to re register itouch

Kindle Reader For Mac Wants Me To Re Register Itax

Kindle Cloud Reader works also fine in the iPad’s Safari browser. Again, you can use Kindle iOS app to login with one Amazon account, and Kindle Cloud Reader for the other.

If you are interested whether the Kindle Cloud Reader can run in Chrome on Android tablet, the answer is “no”. The page prompts to download Kindle for Android app.

• • •

To get more posts like this, please subscribe by RSS or email. Let’s also connect on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.

Interested in more posts about Kindle? Here they are: