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Yacreader epub
Yacreader epub




yacreader epub
  1. Yacreader epub update#
  2. Yacreader epub software#
  3. Yacreader epub download#

Yacreader epub software#

These software are real comic readers that allow you to browse your books in CBZ format. He is working on v.2 and you may want to give that a try.The best solution for open CBZ is to rely on the programs to be installed on your computer. I have used iComics since Tim released the first version and love it. There is a default stack, like we all had when we were kids on our desk or floor, then if we feel like organizing them, you can make nice stacks (folders) of each individual comic title, but why would one do this unless you were storing your comics on your phone? My comics are rarely on my phone long enough to have multiple issues of one title. I like the library function, syncing progress is great when changing devices, and reader works just fine with the few tweaks most of us probably need.ĭo you store your comics on your iPhone or iPhone? I have never noticed a problem with the way it works. I think Panels brought the best balance of form and features for me. It also didn’t have as many reading tweaks as Booklover, but that’s fine with me. In defense of Panels, none of the other options had these features, I’m just thinking of how it could be better.

Yacreader epub download#

I also wish it would sync the library across devices with the ability to easy download missing comics. For those not reading manga, this probably isn’t an issue. It’s not perfect, and I wish it let me change reading direction more broadly than file by file. Best of all, it syncs progress between devices.

Yacreader epub update#

It has a good update history with active development, there is a discourse community for it, the organization functions are intuitive and work well, adding comics is smooth and there are a lot of options. ComicGlass is a year out on its most recent update and Chunky is 5 months. I looked at others on the list like Chunky and ComicGlass, but their feature set was lagging and the update intervals weren’t very good. It also crashed on me while trying to organize things. I had to add comics, which created a collection, then create a new collection and move those comics in the default collection over to the new one. Moving comics into a collection didn’t make sense at all. It at least had some organization unlike Booklover, but it was poorly done. IComics was decent at reading, but the organization was poorly done here too. I probably could have got it working, but I was frustrated by how much work I was putting into it at this point. It’s supposed to be able to sync with ComicVine, but it was not working for me. The server didn’t automate tagging or metadata as I had hoped, but was a library host that I could connect the app to. I was hoping for Calibre levels of control, so my own expectations are probably at fault here.

yacreader epub

Overall it wasn’t bad, but pretty underwhelming. I tried the YACServer as well hoping it would help smooth out metadata management, but it really didn’t do as much as I had hoped.

yacreader epub

It was fine, but I was being picky and it didn’t delight me in the way Booklover or my ultimate pick did. YAC just plain bugged me, it looked like a poorly made react native application built off their electron desktop app and it didn’t sit well with me. Overall it has probably the best reader of any that I tried, but it is lacking in the organization department. It has no ability to make a library and keeps every volume or entry in a broad list. Ultimately, I found myself frustrated with how it handles the library and multiple devices. The greyscale and contrast options were excellent. It has by far the most options for tweaking the reading experience. I went with Booklover first and was initially impressed. I know I’m digging up an old threat here, but I feel the need to comment on this after having spent the last couple days trying out nearly every app suggested here.






Yacreader epub