How to Save Internet Texts to Read on Kindle
The Kindle has an e-ink screen, which does not tire your eyes when reading e-books and can be very useful also for consuming articles from Internet sites. Amazon's famous e-reader does not have a native mechanism for receiving web links, but an external service helps with this task. With Tinderizer, you can create a button in the browser and send interesting pages to read in the e-reader with one click.
Learn, in the following tutorial, the step-by-step how to set up any recent Kindle model on sale in Brazil to read web texts.
How to Restart Kindle to Resolve Slow and Locking
How to Save Web Texts to Read on Kindle
App: Get tech tips and news on your phone
Step 1. Go to Amazon's official website (amazon.com), log in and go to the menu of your account. Select the "Manage your content and devices" option.
Access the device settings on the Amazon site
Step 2. Click the "Settings" tab.
Go to the settings on the Amazon site
Step 3. Scroll down the page until you find your Kindle e-mail address. Write it down to use later. Below, in the list of approved emails, enter the address
Copy your Kindle email and include Tinderizer as approved
Step 4. In the browser of your computer, go to Tinderizer (tinderizer.com) and click on the side in "The Solution".
Click the side button in Tinderizer
Step 5. Click the third checkbox on the side to see an email field. Enter your Kindle address noted in Step 3 of this tutorial. Then select "What's next."
Enter your Kindle email in Tinderizer
Step 6. Click and hold the cursor on "Send to my Kindle" and drag the button to the browser's bookmarks bar.
Drag the Tinderizer button to favorites
Step 7. If you want to leave the name in Portuguese, you can edit the button with a right click of the mouse.
Edit button name in Tinderizer
Step 8. When opening web articles in the browser, just click the button to send text to read on Kindle. A notification appears in the corner of the screen telling you that everything worked, and the content arrives formatted to read comfortably on the Amazon reader.
Send web links to Kindle
Remember that it is essential to register Tinderizer's e-mail, as described in Step 3 of the tutorial, to receive the text on Kindle. Otherwise, Amazon will block the content and it will never arrive via Wi-Fi on the device. The best is that, once set up, a single click takes articles from the internet to your electronic reader to view, even, offline.
Kindle Paperwhite can have its own lighting off? Discover in the Forum.