tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30379986.post1867643555551371783..comments2023-12-10T07:55:27.177+00:00Comments on kenodoxia: Some geeky things and some e-textsJames Warrenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02262258553733864003noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30379986.post-9935650715037689522011-01-07T19:37:21.924+00:002011-01-07T19:37:21.924+00:00Hello. I was intrigued by this because I've n...Hello. I was intrigued by this because I've not had to flatten pdfs, but when I went to the Open library page for the Plato it seems to have a .mobi option already there<br /><a href="http://openlibrary.org/books/OL23324369M/Platonis_opera" rel="nofollow">http://openlibrary.org/books/OL23324369M/Platonis_opera</a>. So it may be that someone's done the work for you on that one, if you don't mind it's being a slightly different file on your computer from on your kindle. The problem is how much you trust the OCR, and whether anyone's going to have proof-read it. You might be better off with your own eyes rather than the eyes of some computer.<br /><br />I use PDF X-Change to make, view, and change PDFs because it's not that expensive compared with full Adobe Acrobat and it lets me do lots of things like adding bookmarks which I can't do in Reader. It does have an option to Flatten the file, but I've not tried it.<br /><br />Bravo for exploring kindle work possibilities -- I haven't got round to this yet myself.RJRhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08128262293399766342noreply@blogger.com