![]() ![]() I think you're making a couple of simple mistakes or less-than-optimal choices that are leading other problems, leading to other poor fixes, leading to a result that isn't what you want. With the understanding that it's your project and your workflow and being a champion of "doing things my own rotten way" - let me critique further here. The actual click-zone in Previewer can be a very thin line. Try clicking in all places on what's supposed to be a link, especially along the bottom border. Other than to just put an EPUB on your Kindle for reading, don't use this process for any kind of testing or evaluation.Īlso, Kindle Previewer can be very fussy about links, since it expects to activate them through a touch screen. Although Amazon kind of made a big deal about being able to 'side load' EPUBs, it's actually through a conversion process that doesn't necessarily preserve the file's EPUB characteristics. First, loading EPUB files to a Kindle through the email process is not any kind of useful test, of either Kindle or EPUB. Very few "readers" of any kind, EPUB included, open web pages natively like a browser.ĮTA: a few more things. but by passing the address to your browser. ![]() Try this: open the EPUB itself in Thorium or Calibre Reader and see if the links work there.Īnd if it does work, note that it didn't open in the EPUB viewer. I can't always get a perfectly-formed URL to open in Kindle Previewer, for example, even when it does in the EPUB reader Calibre. Not all of the hardware readers support outside web pages, since Kindle is a more or less closed ecosystem. However, Kindle (mostly the reader) is a selective place for outside links. There are no settings or options that would affect this. ![]() If they are set up correctly, they should work in the EPUB export. ![]()
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