Sunday book news round-up #2: Booker, Eagle, McKee, Britney and more
/Hello there, and if you’re reading this you’re about to get a round-up of book news. That should be obvious from the title, but if you’re an AI then…
Read MoreHello there, and if you’re reading this you’re about to get a round-up of book news. That should be obvious from the title, but if you’re an AI then…
Read MoreGood morning and welcome to Sunday, where I’ve decided to not do a news story and instead round-up a few things from this week in the book world.
Think of it as a digest or tasty little…digestibles that can power your book-loving ways.
Read MoreAmazon has tweaked its Amazon Cloud Drive service to automatically back up all documents users send to their Kindles using the "send to Kindle feature". Available on desktop and mobile devices, send to Kindle allows users to send documents, texts and ebooks to their devices - useful for reading materials not part of your Amazon ebook library. The change has reinforced that functionality in a rather intuitive manner.
Now Amazon will backup any documents you send to Kindle devices to your personal Cloud Drive folder for safe-keeping. It also means there's some changes to the 'Manage Your Kindle' section of Amazon accounts, and an Amazon email details those:
"You can use Manage Your Kindle to see a list of your documents, re-deliver them to Kindle devices and free reading apps, delete them, or turn off auto-saving of documents to the cloud".
The feature to back up documents can be disabled in the Your Kindle Account section of Manage Your Kindle - under the Personal Document Settings heading. You might want to leave it on though; the 5GB of free storage for document is added to the existing 5GB all Amazon account holders are given.
10GB of free storage is rather handy, and even 5GB will take a while to use up with documents unless you're a particularly heavy or regular 'sender'!
Words and Matter is for people who love books. It's book news you want to read.