![]() RELATED: How To Organize Your Ebook Collection with Calibre It’s no wonder their Kindle was having a fit. The worst example I’ve ever seen was someone trying to read a PDF scan of a book every page was an image and the whole document weighed in at over 100MB. If you’re reading eBooks you acquired from non-Amazon sources, there’s a chance that they might be in a format with which your Kindle struggles. RELATED: How to Read Comic Books and Manga on Your Kindle They can handle PDFs, image heavy documents, and even comics, but they won’t do it as well as a more general purpose tablet. Kindles are designed for small, light eBook files. Note that your Kindle will also have to do some processing immediately after downloading files so it may take a minute or two after the downloads have finished for you to see the difference. Wait for a few minutes until everything’s finished downloading and it should start to run much better. If you’re using a slow internet connection or downloading a large number of eBooks at once (or just a single large book) then there’s a good chance your whole device will feel sluggish. The only real background task your Kindle is going to be doing for any length of time is downloading eBooks. But, if your Kindle is doing anything in the background, it will probably start running slowly. You just don’t need that much processing power to handle eBooks, and most of the time, that’s fine. Kindles are underpowered devices compared to…well, everything else. Check to See If You’re Downloading Anything
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