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Adding books is trivial, as is editing metadata, and the reader itself is splendid. It's very easy to set up, as all you do is either point to a pre-existing library of files or create a new one. I'm perplexed as to whether some of the people in this thread and I are using the same software. It's rarely buggy, fast, logical to use, very feature-rich, and rather customisable. It is hands down one of the most useful programs on my computer. The proof of the pudding is Calibre itself, which is a joy to use. Add to the fact that he eventually fixed every bug in that thread as well as second-language difficulties that he likely experiences, and the vitriol that people have for him is undeserved. His only 'crime' was being blunt with a bug report around eleven years ago, and I'm struggling to see why people are so myopic as to turn that into their entire perception of him.
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He's very patient and kind with beginners, responsive to feedback, and rarely loses his cool with anyone. Anyone who has spent a decent amount of time on the mobileread forums will also know him as a remarkably intelligent, dedicated, and all-round fantastic guy. Kovid puts in an extraordinary amount of work (nearly 80 hours a week) into Calibre - of which most is for free, in the name of open source software. I must admit, I'm slightly shocked at some of the comments here. This comment is from the perspective of a Calibre power-user, and someone who has been involved with the software for years now.
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