Spyke

I've been using this a few months and recommend it as well. It's serviceable but feels a bit janky. Scrolling and switching between view styles tends to leave black boxes on my device, and the UI doesn't always disappear while scrolling. But I'd still recommend it for how light and fast it is on top of being FOSS

4
lemmy.world

I've been using MuPDF for pdf's and Libera for epubs, both on f-droid. Libera can also read pdf's but for reasons I don't remember, it wasn't as usable for them as MuPDF is, at least for me. So I stayed with MuPDF.

12

+1 for MuPDF. It's so lightweight it almost feels like a native part of the OS

3
lemmy.ml

Firefox has a PDF reader built in these days.

10
Atemureply
lemmy.ml

In what way? It works quite alright for me.

3
Pantherinareply
feddit.de

Yeah no idea why but on Android its bad, on Linux just fine

2
solrizereply
lemmy.world

Nah it's crap on Linux too. Maybe not quite as bad. On Linux I generally use atril or xpdf these days.

0
Pantherinareply
feddit.de

Firefox on Linux (binary, Fedora, Flathub, compiled) is very good for PDF reading

2

I use Firefox on Linux and its pdf reader sort of works but it is really bad compared to a dedicated reader, e.g. when you want to scroll quickly or zoom the magnfication around. Try downloading a pdf book from archive.org and reading it with Firefox. I'm using the LTE version from Debian so maybe that isn't as good as some of the other builds though, hmm.

1

It's 👍 but barebones. No dark mode and support for native and user-created bookmarks.

1
lemmy.sdf.org

Play Store version is paid but comes with additional features including network library integrations

No general reader abilities are behind a paywall though. So fdroid(free) version is recomended

1

What sort of network library integrations are you referring to? The version I install directly from repo has Project Gutenberg and Internet Archive preconfigured, and I can add my own Calibre and OPDS libraries too.

Edit: the Play Store version (Pro) is also available via the repo, along with the F-droid release. Another reason I avoid F-droid and install direct from repo using Obtainium.

1
aussie.zone

I'm surprised nobody mentioned a browser, never thought to go beyond it. Any reason people have/prefer dedicated software aside from a browser?

5

Been using Okular on my linux laptop and its great. I wish the windows version had a better logo, but the features it comes with is awesome.

4

I'd say you can just use a browser if it's a quick check. MoonReader is really nice for ebooks and it cloud syncs your current spot.

3

KOReader. The app is multiplatform (also for some e-readers and Linux) so the UI is not among the most beautiful (but I actually prefer it over Librera), but it's feature packed, and does really well what it's made for.

2

I bought readera to support the dev, but actually prefer the free version. The "syncing..." dialogue each time you open annoys me, and living in a country that blocks google, the failed license check that force-closes the app is crap as well.

4

Adobe Acrobat. I like it because it has dark theme and reopens last page that was opened before.

Not sure what you mean about text scaling, you should be able to zoom in...

1

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