1 Turn on your Kindle by pushing the power switch on the bottom of the device. And select a PDF document to read in the menu of your Kindle e-reader by using the arrow keys on the Kindle keyboard. Then press the Aa button on the Kindle keyboard when the document you want to read is open.
Though not necessarily revolutionary, the Kindle for Mac app does the job. Among other benefits, it syncs your last read page with Whispersync, syncs Kindle notes, and promises to utilize Windows 7’s touch technology, allowing readers to pinch-zoom, and, in future releases, turn pages with finger swipes. Although I can download a native Kindle app via windows app store and get a larger version of an image, but I still can not enlarge the image instantly. The best way to handle the images on a PC is to use an android app emulator on your windows PC / Surface or Mac.
2 The second step is to look for the Font Size menu to appear on the screen. A selection of zoom percentage options will appear within the menu. Select the zoom percentage based on how large you want the text to appear.
3 And next, position the zoom box around the text you want to zoom in on in the PDF document. Use the directional arrow keys to position the box correctly and press the Enter key when finished. The zoom feature will now be activated and the selected part of the PDF document will be enlarged.
How To Zoom In Text Kindle App For Macbook
Kindle 2.6 for iPhone and iPad now displays “real page numbers,” which Amazon has been adding to a large number of e-books available from the Kindle Store.
As you might recall, Amazon recently posted a software preview for the latest generation of hardware Kindles which added real page numbers support, and promised to add this feature to its mobile Kindle apps shortly.
The Kindle apps will now display both page numbers, based on a certain print edition of the book, and the old standard Kindle “locations” for supported books. Amazon lists the ISBN of the print edition from which the page numbers originate in the Kindle e-book details, which is how you can tell if a particular e-book supports real pages or not. (This information isn’t listed on e-books which don’t offer real pages.)
If real pages leave you cold, worry not, there are a few other new features added to the updated iOS app that might tickle your fancy. Tracking reading progress on the iPhone is easier now that the app displays the percentage of the book that you’ve completed. Both the iPhone and iPad now display how far along you are in each of your books on the home screen when in list view. Plus you can now look up words using Google and Wikipedia without leaving your book.
Kindle 2.6 is available for free in the App Store.