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Update - Unfortunately Amazon has stopped support and development of Mobi Reader so it's no longer available at the official site mobipocket.com You may. Get the Mobipocket eBook Reader on your Windows PC - it's free - and build up your library of eBooks, RSS eNews and eDocs using the #1 online ebookstore. All your Digital Text, in One Place Store all your eBooks, eNews & self-published eDocs on your PC. Download eBooks in Mobi format from your favorite ebookstores to read on your smartphone, PDA, laptop or on your desktop PC. Mobipocket Reader for Java Phones - Alpha version released The first public alpha of the Mobipocket Reader for Java Phones is available here. This version has been developed for all Sony Ericsson Java Phones, but at least DRM-free e-books apparently also work on Nokia phones.

I was able to get it running with Sun's Java Wireless Toolkit for CLDC (scroll down for the download link).
OnlineYou have to change some configurations before it works:
  1. Open Java Wireless Toolkit, select 'File -> Create Project from JAD/JAR file' and open 'MobipocketReader.jad'. The message Project 'MobipocketReader' loaded should appear in the window. Next time you can just click 'Open Project' and select MobipocketReader from the list.
  2. Select 'Edit -> Preferences'. Select Security and change the security policy to JTWI. You may also change the security domain to trusted, otherwise the emulator will ask for permission to read and write to the filesystem each time you start Mobipocket Reader. Then click OK.
  3. Select Run and the Java phone emulator will be started. You have to use the phone buttons to navigate, so select 'library' with the phone's select button.
  4. You'll probably get the message that you have no e-books in your library, so close the emulator and navigate to ~/j2mewtk/2.5.2/appdb/DefaultColorPhone/filesystem/root1/eBooks. I don't know where the 'j2mewtk' folder will be on Windows, but on Linux it's in the user's home directory. Just do a search. Put some Mobipocket e-books in this folder.
That's it. You can also select the phone's skin by choosing one of the four devices before starting the emulator (the combo box on the JWT main screen). Notice however that each device has it's own library and PID.

Online Java Reader


Mobipocket Reader Windows

Attached are some screenshots.

Mobipocket Reader Cho Java 10

The Pepper Pad's O/S is Linux (Fedora Core 4) but its primary application suite is Java based, and includes MobiPocket Reader. Since this will apparently soon be on the iLiad, I enclose some screenshots from the (800x480) PP3 using the Mobi Reader.
I used the HTML version of IllustratedLondonReader from Project Gutenberg, because deadite66 suggested that MobiPocket displays HTML. I think it is more accurate to say that MobiPocket imports HTML. Under Windows I imported the HTML using the new (beta) version 6.0 MobiPocket Reader, and copied the resulting .prc file to my PP3. The first 3 screen shots are from this document using the Java MobiPocket Reader. The graphics display well (smaller than the originals), but the reader is much less customizable than (say) the Windows 5.2 version. In particular the line spacing (double?) and the margins (very large) are not under user control. You can select the font and the font size. There are no rotation or page layout options. The PP3 isn't very comfortable in portrait mode, but a lack of screen rotation options might be significant on the iLiad.
The next 3 screen shots are from the same file using FBReader (note that Abbey is in blue because I searched for this word). All its display characteristics are under user control, and I have it setup to display much more text per screen in a bold font. The page can be rotated (+90, +180, +270 degrees). However, it does not detect the hyperlinks in the .prc (actually .mobi) file. In fact, the PP3 and the Windows MobiPocket Readers have a hyperlinked CONTENTS section within the document but no 'table of contents' in the menu, and FBReader has a table of contents in its menu but no in-line hyperlinks. FBReader can presumably be updated to detect the links.
I tried a .prc from Baen, and it has a table of contents that is in the menu of all three readers.
FBReader reads HTML directly, and the last 3 screen shots are FBReader on the original (zipped) HTML file. It now detects the hyperlinks. I also show one screen with the FBReader top panel, rather than in full screen mode. Note that the progress bar at the bottom can also be removed if you want.
The PP3 Java version was ported by Pepper, and MobiPocket says that Pepper is in charge of how much functionality to provide. So it isn't clear if the Java version is actually much less capable than other versions of MobiPocket reader, or if Pepper did a minimal port. In any case, given the availability of FBRreader, I will only use the PP3 Mobi Reader if I ever buy an encripted e-book.