Thanks for that. When I am formatting HTML into epub I use a really nice editor,
Sigil. I have used Calibre but didn't like it as much as I like using Sigil. It is readily downloadable and easy to understand.
http://code.google.com/p/sigil/
"Now what does it have to offer...
* Free and open source software under GPLv3
* Multi-platform: runs on Windows, Linux and Mac
* Full Unicode support: everything you see in Sigil is in UTF-16
* Full EPUB spec support
* WYSIWYG editing
* Multiple Views: Book View, Code View and Split View
* Metadata editor with full support for all possible metadata entries (more than 200) with full descriptions for each
* Table Of Contents editor
* Multi-level TOC support
* Book View fully supports the display of any XHTML document possible under the OPS spec
* SVG support
* Basic XPGT support
* Advanced automatic conversion of all imported documents to Unicode
* Currently imports TXT, HTML and EPUB files; more will be added with time
* Embedded HTML Tidy; all imported documents are thoroughly cleaned; changing views cleans the document so no matter how much you screw up your code, it will fix it (usually)
* An actually usable user interface
* Native C++ application
* Bugs
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
* And a lot more... "
For reading my epubs I prefer
FBReader, freely available from
http://fbreader.org or else Linux users can find it in most recent repositories.
"FBReader is an e-book reader for various platforms. Currently FBReader works on
* Linux desktop.
* Windows XP/Vista computer.
* FreeBSD computer.
* Various linux-based mobile devices: "
I run it on both my Linux-powered EEE Netbook and my Windows 7 powered desktop.
Again, thanks for putting this into a format that i can use on my netbook, you have saved me the bother of doing it
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)