1. Kindle reads PDFs, so there's no reason to convert them. There are a few converters online, you can search for them on a search engine. Amazon offers a service for the file formats that the Kindle can't read: you can send the file as an attachment to the email they provide (something like "yourregularemailusername@kindle.com") and for a small fee they will send it to you in azw format to your Kindle. 2. But if your PDF files are downloaded from other stores such as Kobo, Google, etc, you have to convert them now. Though the artic below the link is about how to convert PDF to mobi, but at the Step 2 you can select the output format as the AZW not the mobi.
Yes, Kindle accepts .azw, .mobi, .prc, .tpz
Kindle format is azw3, azw, mobi, prc, tpz, etc.
Well, usually .azw for books, but it can also read .txt files and .MOBI files. From Amazon Kindle User's Manual: Supported Formats for Conversion In addition to the file formats listed above, you can also convert other personal documents to read on your Kindle. The supported file formats are listed below: • Microsoft Word (.DOC) • Structured HTML (.HTML, .HTM) • JPEG (.JPEG, .JPG) • GIF (.GIF) • PNG (.PNG) • BMP (.BMP) • Compressed ZIP (.ZIP) In addition to the above the Kindle can also display PDF formated documents.
zip
Yes. You should be able to make files in any storage device.
It produces .wma (for audio files) and .wmv (for video files).
This doesn't make sense :/
Yes, as long as they're in an acceptable format (i.e. MOBI, AZW, etc.).
A program that can make .zip files. You can download archive files with it and then extract them.
All files are already compatible like ZIP-files, DOC-files, TXT-files, Images etc
In order to make the computer run more efficiently, Microsoft began to use .dll files as opposed to .exe files, but these new .dll files could not be opened directly from Windows. This is why SVCHost was created, to make these files accessible.