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How to Convert Kindle AZW Books to EPUB Freely Posted on Feb 5, 2015| AZW is the file format for Amazon Kindle books, and usually for the books sync via Kindle for PC/Mac software. And it can only read on Amazon’s official reading apps, while EPUB is far more open and popular, which is supported by most of third-party reading devices and apps. AZW Books Are Always DRMed As I mentioned in the first paragraph, if you download Kindle books via Kindle for PC/Mac apps, the files are always comes with AZW format. And, they are DRMed. Which means, you cannot convert the file format.
Therefore, to convert AZW books to other format like EPUB, we need to deDRM them at first. I’ve already compiled an ultimate guide post about how to. Please do the job as that post instructs, I am gonna just cover the conversion part here. Free Tool to Convert AZW to EPUB We use the free app Calibre to convert our books.
Click buttons below to download it for free. If you are using Calibre to remove DRM, then the book should be already added into Calibre. If you are using other program like ePUBee to remove DRM, please add the DRM-free file into Calibre. After removing DRM, the AZW book becomes AZW3 or MOBI. Then we click “Convert books” button in the top bar. Open the drop-down list of “Output format” and choose “EPUB”. And click “OK” in the bottom right corner, then book will start converting to EPUB.
Back to home page, you can see “Jobs: 1” in bottom right corner, this means the book is under processing. When it comes to “0”, you will be able to see “EPUB” in “Formats” under the book cover.
Click on “EPUB” you can preview the book by Calibre’s built-in reading module. Click on “Click to open” you can open the folder where saves the file. With the converted EPUB book, I can read it on any device or app I want, like iBooks app on my iPhone, or Moon+ Reader on an Android tablet.
By • 2:00 pm, August 10, 2017 • • Try this with an iPad Photo: Charlie Sorrel/Cult of Mac If you’re hanging out on the beach this summer, or kicking back on the porch with a beer and one of Cult of Mac’s amazing, you might notice how hard it is to see the iPhone or iPad’s screen in the sunlight. How about sending that long article to you Kindle instead?
Not only is the e-ink screen perfect for reading in bright light, but the battery lasts forever, saving you from burning through your iPhone’s juice even faster than usual because you have the screen brightness all the way up. Advertisement Happily, it is now easier than ever to send an article to you Kindle from your iPhone. Today we’ll see two ways to do it. Transfer articles to Kindle with Instapaper The old ways aren’t necessarily the bad ways. Instapaper has has the option to send a periodic summary of your saved articles to the Kindle for quite a while. You can still do this, but once you have set up the connection between Kindle and Instapaper, you can send individual articles from the Instapaper iOS app and have them show up in your Kindle’s Documents library.
Pro tip: you probably shouldn’t bother with this method, as the native Kindle app method is way easier. If you insist, though, here’s how to do it.
Add you Kindle’s email address here. Photo: Cult of Mac Head over to the, and if that link doesn’t take you there already, tap Settings in the sidebar, and then scroll down to the Kindle section.
Instapaper uses your Kindle’s email address to send articles, and you can find out this address either by searching in your Kindle, or by going to your on Amazon. Copy that address into the indicated field in Instapaper’s settings, and then copy Instapaper’s sending address to your whitelist of approved address at Amazon.
This last is to prevent Spam from being send to your Kindle from unknown addresses. While you’re here, you can configure your Kindle Digest options — whether you want a daily or weekly digest sent, and if so, how many articles should be in it. I have this switched off because, like most people, I never actually read my Instapaper articles. Now, when you have this set up, you can easily send single articles from Instapaper to Kindle: Sharing from Instapaper is super easy.