Barnes & Noble BNRV300 manual Jumping to the Furthest Page Read, Archiving Books and Periodicals

Models: BNRV300

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Archiving Books and Periodicals

To save storage space on your NOOK, you can archive books and periodicals you’re not currently reading. Archiving keeps a copy of a book in your account on the Barnes & Noble Web site, while removing all but the most basic infor- mation about the book (such as its cover, title, author, and description) from your NOOK. You can unarchive a book at any time, so your reading material is not lost.

NOTE: While your book is archived, you will not be able to read it. Unarchive the book to gain access to it again.

To archive a book or periodical, do this:

1.On the details page you opened with the more button in the Reading Tools, tap the Archive button. A dialog box opens, asking you if you are sure you want to move this item to your BN.com archive.

2.Tap OK.

Your NOOK archives the book or periodical. It lists the book or periodical on a shelf in your Library called Archived.

NOTE: Because the text of the item you have been reading has been archived, when you close the details page, you will see a page from some other item you have been reading, rather than the item you were just reading.

Unarchiving Books or Periodicals

Unarchiving a book or periodical makes its contents available again on your NOOK.

To unarchive a book or periodical, do this:

1.In the Library, pull down the category menu and select Archived. Your NOOK displays titles that you have archived.

2.Find the book you want to unarchive, and tap the Unarchive button next to its title. Your NOOK unarchives the book or periodical and downloads it to your Library.

NOTE: If the book or periodical does not appear right away, tap the Sync button at the top of the Library screen to update your Library.

Jumping to the Furthest Page Read

If you’ve been reading this book or periodical on some other device (such as a desktop computer or a smartphone) using a NOOK application, and your NOOK has access to the Internet through its Wi-Fi connection, then when you open a book or periodical, your NOOK will compare the last page you read on the NOOK to the last page you read on any other device.

If you have read further on the other device, your NOOK jumps to the furthest page you’ve read, even if you haven’t read that page on your NOOK.

Barnes & Noble NOOK User Guide

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Barnes & Noble BNRV300 manual Jumping to the Furthest Page Read, Archiving Books and Periodicals