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SNB vs TXT

SNB vs TXT

A detailed comparison of S-Note eBook and Plain Text — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

SNB

S-Note eBook

eBooks

SNB (Shanda Bambook) is a proprietary ebook format developed by Shanda Interactive for their Bambook e-reader. It uses a ZIP-based container with XML content and was primarily used in the Chinese ebook market.

About SNB files
TXT

Plain Text

Documents & Text

TXT files contain unformatted plain text with no styling, images, or layout information. They are universally readable by any device and operating system, making them the simplest document format.

About TXT files

Strengths Comparison

SNB Strengths

  • Chinese typography support.
  • Calibre-compatible.

TXT Strengths

  • Universally readable — every operating system, every editor, every programming language.
  • Zero metadata overhead: the file size equals the character count (for ASCII).
  • Safe to diff, grep, version-control, and pipe through command-line tools.
  • Immune to format obsolescence: a text file from 1970 still opens today.
  • Tiny footprint for structured data like logs or configuration.

Limitations

SNB Limitations

  • Deprecated.
  • Tiny ecosystem.
  • No new content.

TXT Limitations

  • No styling, images, or embedded structure — just characters.
  • Character encoding ambiguity (ISO-8859-1 vs UTF-8 vs Windows-1252) causes "mojibake".
  • Line-ending differences between OSes still cause subtle bugs today.
  • No way to carry hyperlinks, tables, or formatting without a convention on top (like Markdown).

Technical Specifications

Specification SNB TXT
MIME type application/x-snb text/plain
Extension .snb
Origin Shanda Bambook (China)
Common encodings UTF-8, UTF-16, ASCII, ISO-8859-1, Windows-1252
Line endings LF (Unix), CRLF (Windows), CR (classic Mac)
Max file size Limited only by filesystem (no format-level limit)
Structure None — flat sequence of characters

Typical File Sizes

SNB

  • Chinese novel 500 KB - 3 MB

TXT

  • Short note < 1 KB
  • README file 2–20 KB
  • Full novel (~90,000 words) 500 KB – 1 MB
  • Server log file (daily) 10 MB – 1 GB

Ready to convert?

Convert between SNB and TXT online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

SNB (S-Note eBook) is an ebook format designed for reading long-form text on dedicated e-readers, tablets, and ebook apps. It is part of the ebooks family and typically supports reflowable text, embedded images, chapter navigation, cover art, and metadata (title, author, ISBN) in a portable package.

TXT (Plain Text) is a document format used to store paginated text, with optional formatting, tables, images, hyperlinks, headers and footers. It sits in the documents & text family and is typically associated with a specific office suite or publishing pipeline that defined the format and ships the canonical reader.

Dedicated e-readers — Kindle, Kobo, Nook, Pocketbook — support the most common ebook formats. On phones, Apple Books, Google Play Books, Moon+ Reader and KOReader all handle SNB. For desktop reading, Calibre is the universal ebook viewer and library manager. Convert to EPUB or PDF for maximum compatibility.

Modern office suites — Microsoft Word, Google Docs, LibreOffice Writer, Apple Pages — open most TXT files with reasonable fidelity. If your installed software does not support TXT, convert to DOCX or PDF first using KaijuConverter; both open in virtually every reader, including free online viewers.

Upload your SNB to KaijuConverter and pick EPUB, MOBI, PDF, AZW3, or similar targets. Our Calibre-powered pipeline preserves chapter structure, embedded images, cover art, and metadata. Conversion takes seconds for typical novels; long technical books with many images may take a little longer.

EPUB is the open ebook standard — it plays on every e-reader except older Kindles and in every major ebook app. PDF is better for fixed-layout content (textbooks, coffee-table books) and printing. Pick EPUB when the ebook is reflowable text, PDF when the layout matters more than the reading experience.