![]() That is what happens if you manually put the book on the device. When this happens, you lose the reading status, annotations and collections for the book. If the book is replaced, and the device deems that the book has change (basically the file size has changed), the device will clear the metadata for the book and process it as a new book. I don't know about the others.Īs you list that you have a Kobo Libra H2O, then it will process the book the first time it sees it and extract the metadata. Kobos does this in a batch when you disconnect the device. The device processes the books when they are first seen and update a database of some sort with the metadata. Most are using some sort of database on the device. How the metadata on an is store for display is different for each of the devices. Some ereader apps, such as KOReader, will look at this for metadata, but, I do not know of any dedicated ereader device that does. ![]() And to help where there are some issues with that matching. It is used to speed up the matching of books on the device to the library. This is a link between the books on the device and the library. Calibre maintains a file called metadata.calibre in the root directory of the device. No, that is for calibres use, not the devices.
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