
- Macjournal new entries open with a table pdf#
- Macjournal new entries open with a table install#
- Macjournal new entries open with a table portable#
Again, this may be overwritten by CSS for a specific site, but it’s a useful default. I also found the output was much nicer if I set Safari to use a sans-serif font as the default. In the absence of other info Safari will use the on-screen font size as a guideline for the font to use for printing, and you want slightly larger than normal for the PRS.
Macjournal new entries open with a table pdf#
Or, like me, you can put it somewhere else and put an alias in the PDF Services folder which has a nice name. You need to put the script in your ~/Library/PDF Services folder (create it if you haven’t got one). I created a wrapper script called book2prs which will be given the resulting PDF and will send it to the PRS using Kovid’s prs500 utility.

Go into File > Page Setup, pull down the ‘Paper size’ option and create a custom page size that you’ll use, where possible, for printing to the PRS.I wanted a way to take an arbitrary document on my Mac and make it available as a PDF on my PRS. Once you’ve got libprs500 installed, though, you can start to do fun things.
Macjournal new entries open with a table install#
Sony owe him some money – the profit from my purchase, at the very least! You need to install a few bits, like Python 2.5, to use libprs500 – the easiest way is probably to use MacPorts. He’s reverse-engineered the Sony protocols and created a Python-based library and utilities that can transfer files to and from the PRS.

You can run the Sony software just fine under Windows using Parallels, but that’s yucky too.įortunately, Kovid Goyal came to my rescue with a system called librs500. Sadly, the PRS doesn’t just appear as a USB storage device. You can use a card reader to plug an SD card into your Mac, copy the files onto it and then plug it into the PRS, but that’s hardly convenient, especially in comparison to the (optional) USB docking station. However, there was a big question-mark over my purchase, which was that there is no official Mac or Linux support for this device. You can put text files, RTF files, PDF files on it as well, and they look gorgeous. It’s designed to be a replacement for a paperback – a way of viewing eBooks, and unlike some earlier devices, it’s not limited to DRM-encoded books downloaded from the manufacturer.
Macjournal new entries open with a table portable#
It’s the Sony PRS – the Portable Reader System – which is a bit like a giant read-only PalmPilot that uses the new e-Paper type display. Yesterday, finding myself in Palo Alto, I took advantage of the current UK/US exchange rates to buy myself a new toy in Fry’s.
