this post was submitted on 13 Oct 2023
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AFAIK you can use Kindle completely offline. Some family members do exactly this. They buy books online and upload them over USB. The main reason is that they read books in language that the Kindle store does not support.
But yeah, as far as I know the devices weren't online like ever. Maybe except some initial setup that needs an Amazon account. You can just make a burner account, set the device up and don't even bother storing credentials.
You lose some convenience like synchronization of reading progress and notes, but I'm not sure whether any of the open source options even have that kind of functionality.
Kindle hardware is shit. It's built extremely cheaply, and it's not made to be repaired. I have a Kindle with a broken display, asked Amazon support if it is possible to replace it, they said it's not and they don't sell parts.
It's designed to be build-able by anyone and extensible, so it should be repairable by the average consumer. You can just hack kindle hardware as long as the device works but this project is trying to actually build something more sustainable.
There's no need to hack anything. You can just copy ebooks directly onto any Kindle and it works perfectly fine out of the box.
You need to be very patient to hack your Kindle, and hope for a new exploit, as they update them to the latest version (un hackable) before sending them out.