• stoy@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    I remember when I got a Kobo Glo ereader a decade ago, I was soo excited to have an ereader that wasn’t tied to Amazon.

    So I booted it up, and it immediately wanted me to not only register, but to download a program on my computer, and do it from there.

    I refused and got pissed.

    I started googling and found a guide to hack it.

    You had to manually modify the Sqlite database and create a user there.

    After doing that, it just worked.

    The feeling of relief and accomplishment was fantastic!

      • merc@sh.itjust.works
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        7 hours ago

        I have a Kindle Paperwhite and I jailbroke it to install KO Reader.

        The only difficult bit was getting a version of the Kindle software that was rootable. To do that you have to make sure it doesn’t get updates, which basically means not allowing it to go online. If you ever go online, no matter what else happens, it tries to update its firmware. I ended up letting the battery on mine drain and then tossed it in a drawer for a few months. Eventually it was out of date enough that I could root it.

        I got lucky because there was a jailbreakable version relatively soon. It looks like the last SW version that could be fully jailbroken was back in January 2022.

        Wouldn’t it be nice if Amazon had actual competitors and you could buy an e-reader that just ran open source software?

        • PolarisFx@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 hours ago

          I found out about the new jailbreak, hours before Amazon pushed an update to fix it. Luckily my older Kindle was dead so I could JB that one. Pissed, because I prefer koreader and was looking forward to jailbreaking my new Kindle

    • clonedhuman@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      That was a great feeling–taking something locked in, programmed, something that used intentionally deceptive description and design, and finding a way to make it your own. To, basically, break the deceptive design and make the device better by “breaking” it.

      When I rooted my first Android phone I felt that way. It’s a shame how much of the computing power in phones is used for nothing but harvesting our data and profiting from our use of the computer.

      There’s so much more we need to break now.

      • Ajzak@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        it’s very sad to me that I won’t be rooting my next phone because of play integrity API. At least ADB is here to stay… right?