
Currently available for Chrome and Firefox (with Safari coming soon), the extension adds a button to your browser's UI that will, on command, push web content to your Kindle library in two-clicks. If you're looking to send web content (say a news article or even a tutorial from this very site) to your Kindle app or device, the easiest way is to grab the Send to Kindle extension for your browser. The first of the three ways in which to do this is through email, where you're able to grab yourself a Send-to-Kindle email address to mail documents to, in order for them to be pushed through to your app or device. Send to Kindle allows you to push a variety of content types to your Kindle or Kindle reading app, including web content and documents. However, what if it's not a book that you're looking to read on your device? This is where Send to Kindle comes into practice. Whispersync is a great way of automatically having your Amazon books be completely in sync wherever you choose to read them, whether that be in an app on your phone, tablet or Mac, or on a Kindle device itself. You're still able to enact manual syncing of the last page read on a Kindle device by selecting the menu and choosing Sync to Furthest Page Read. Simply head to your Amazon account on the web, visit the Manage Your Kindle page, select Manage Your Device and turn off Whispersync Device Synchronization. If for some reason you wish to disable Whispersync, it's easy to perform a halt on the feature. The Kindle for Mac app, here prompting me to sync to a further page as it has been read more recently on a different device. If you're using the Kindle for Mac app as part of a cross-platform reading setup, you'll be prompted when opening a book to change the page if you've recently read further. The furthest page read on a Kindle device or app, allowing you to instantly find your place whenever you switch devicesįortunately, Whispersync is always turned on by default so you don't have to do anything to get it up and running.


