20 comments

  • Theofrastus 1 hour ago
    Slightly related: I'm currently reading manga on a normal Android tablet using Mihon. I'd love to read on an eInk display, but I'd rather manage my library on device instead of having to use a pc and transferring chapters manually.

    Does anyone have experience with Anrdoid capable eInk tablets? Are there any good, affordable ones?

  • sabslikesobs 15 hours ago
    Super cool. Thanks for maintaining this.

    I read manga extensively on my Kobo Forma with koreader. I wrote a script with imagemagick to scale, trim, adjust contrast, map to 16 colors, dither, and repack, all without me having to interact with it... something I'm hoping to open-source sometime, although it's very specific to my use case.

    • seam_carver 13 hours ago
      Can't wait to see it when you open source
  • thenthenthen 2 hours ago
    Tangent, this person made a ‘magic wand’ manga to eink translator microscope contraption: https://friend.camp/@mewo2/114451110301432410
  • shiandow 17 hours ago
    Are there any plans to integrate this with calibre? Or is it integrated already?

    The combination would be quite powerful IMHO.

    • seam_carver 17 hours ago
      I personally just do boring USB transfer of files instead. Users have reported issues with Calibre modifying KCC files and breaking the formatting, fixed layout books like comics/manga are different than normal reflowable ebooks.

      I only use Calibre for normal ebooks.

      Maybe in the future, KCC has command line versions as well. It's all Python.

      • shiandow 17 hours ago
        I think calibre plugins are all python, in theory that should work. In practice, who knows.
      • carlosjobim 16 hours ago
        How do you do USB transfers without Calibre?
  • goosedragons 12 hours ago
    Is it weird that I kind of want ePub to ePub support? I have many not Kobo compatible comics/manga from places like Humble Bundle that I need to fix. Ideally I'd like to keep metadata + reading direction and perhaps the table of contents. I suppose I could script something that unzips 'em and then processes them....
    • seam_carver 11 hours ago
      Yea, that's true, but it's not as simple as just unzipping the epub, I've found sometimes that the pages aren't named in a sorted order, the order is defined in one of the opf file.
    • seam_carver 11 hours ago
      There's a FAQ in the readme about Humble Bundle. I've found that the PDF source is the absolute best quality with the least amount of resizing artifacts/moire compared to epub.
      • goosedragons 11 hours ago
        Yeah, not all the bundles offer books as PDF either. And they're not all from Humble Bundle.
  • joshdavham 16 hours ago
    Hey thanks for posting this! I'll defintitely check it out.

    Also, as a somewhat unrelated question: how would you recommend someone go about learning pyqt? I've looked into it briefly and am not really sure what the recommended resources are for this framework.

    • seam_carver 15 hours ago
      This project was my first exposure to Qt, and I just read the official docs.
  • romaaeterna 8 hours ago
    I have found that the trick to getting optimized kindle display with imagemagick tools is to process pages as individual images, and then use a tool like img2pdf to quickly stitch them together into a pdf file as a simple archive.
    • seam_carver 7 hours ago
      The kindle pdf renderer is much slower than the mobi/azw3 renderer and isn’t full screen.
  • tecleandor 15 hours ago
    Looks nice! I'm gonna test it!

    Feature idea (that I think it doesn't have): a gamma/palette sampler. Takes one page of the source, and generates an output with multiple pages, all for the same source page, but each one using a different gamma and/or palette option. Useful when the source is "difficult" (weird shading, colors...) or it's an unknown device, to find the best configuration.

    • seam_carver 15 hours ago
      I usually leave it on auto or disable gamma by setting it to 1.0
  • ksynwa 16 hours ago
    Normally I just use Koreader on my Kobo. It crops out the margin automatically which is necessary for the small screen. Then I play with the contrast to make the blacks look like they would on paper. Hate asking people to sell their hard work to me but is there something else that this tool does to make the experience even better?
    • seam_carver 15 hours ago
      The main audience of KCC doesn't have access to the powerful features of koreader, but filesize optimization is pretty nice and can get filesizes down significantly.

      Cropping whitespace between panels (not just margins on the edge) is also cool. And page number cropping.

      • 7jjjjjjj 15 hours ago
        This is a huge deal for me, last time I wanted to read manga on my kindle the filesize is what killed the idea.
        • MilanTodorovic 13 hours ago
          I got around this with Pillow and Python by reducing the image quality to like 20% which in my case didn't have any compromises, but reduced the image size quite substantially. Then I repackaged the images back into cbz and used KCC to make a proper file. As a disclaimer, I have done it only with the Kaiji Ultimate Survivor series to be able to fit the entire manga on my Kindle PW3 with 4GB of storage (I already used up like 1.5GB). Kaiji has less complex drawings, which most certainly plays a role.
  • looperhacks 17 hours ago
    This sounds great!

    I never got to reading manga on my Paperwhite 4(?) because the scaling made the text terrible to read (that was with KOReader a few years ago). Does this tool handle this better?

    • seam_carver 17 hours ago
      A recent feature I implemented a few weeks ago was virtual panel view.

      You can enable it in the Kindle Aa menu.

      You can double tap a corner to zoom into the corner in portrait mode 150% zoom.

      Or you can turn the Kindle sideways to read half a page at a time.

      and KCC scaling using the LANCOZ algorithm, which looks great.

  • roskelld 14 hours ago
    Bookmarking this for when I have some free time. It might get me back to finishing my read through of Berserk.
    • royaltjames 12 hours ago
      I just started this today and wow
  • sepositus 16 hours ago
    Has anyone tried this on a Remarkable? It always seemed like the perfect size for reading comic books/magna.
    • seam_carver 15 hours ago
      Considering how ReMarkable support was added by a community member, it probably looks great.

      edit: added remarkable 1/2 sample file to link in other comment.

  • npteljes 16 hours ago
    Curious project! I'd love to check out the samples, but the links don't seem to be working in the README.
    • seam_carver 15 hours ago
      Oh... the sample links are all dead. They were made by previous KCC maintainer.

      For now, here's some kindle scribe samples. The mobi can be usb transferred, the epub can be sent via Send to Kindle. They might look fine on other Kindles, let me know! Otherwise I can put up more samples.

      https://www.mediafire.com/folder/ixh40veo6hrc5/kcc_samples

      Edit: added more kindles/kobos/remarkable, lmk if I made any errors! only difference is resolution

  • w00ds 13 hours ago
    Exactly what I've been looking for, amazing work!
  • Mr_Eri_Atlov 15 hours ago
    This looks incredibly well done. Thank you for this tool!
  • janetmissed 15 hours ago
    ty for maintaining kcc, I’ve used it heavily for close to a decade. I definitely noticed the performance boost on my macbook :)
    • seam_carver 15 hours ago
      KCC is developed on an M2 Mac Mini so I was highly incentivized to make it fast on Apple.
  • i_v 14 hours ago
    What’s the best screen size for reading manga on an eInk display? I’ve always had issues with the entry level Kindles cutting things off or requiring scrolling to get the bottom section of a page. It’s been a long time since I tried this but I’ve always wanted to get my collection on a Kindle or other reader!
    • nelson_tai 2 hours ago
      I would say at least 7", 8" or 9" would be better. 10" and above are awesome for comic reading, but their weight are too heavy and size are too large for portable usage.

      I'm using the Kobo Libra H2O which is 7", it's okay for comic but I wish I had bought the Kobo Forma 8" at the time.

    • seam_carver 14 hours ago
      I use 10” kindles like the scribe and DX. Bigger than a physical paper volume
  • ronakjain90 10 hours ago
    At TRMNL we have published a guide on how to jailbreak your Kindle[1], we also have a lot of community driven recipe[2] which are comics[3]

    Disclosure: I work at TRMNL

    [1]- https://usetrmnl.com/guides/turn-your-amazon-kindle-into-a-t...

    [2]- https://usetrmnl.com/recipes

    [3]- https://usetrmnl.com/recipes/27184

    • philips 9 hours ago
      That’s really fun use of TRMNL. I have the official device partially because I failed to find a jailbreak eligible Kindle in late 2024 :)