

I bet you don’t even know what a bicycle looks like.
Prove me wrong:

Nerd; Board, Card, Pencil & Paper Gamer; Avid Reader.


I bet you don’t even know what a bicycle looks like.
Prove me wrong:

I just set up a Asus ZenWifi BE14000 to replace an old eero setup. I like it so far and haven’t experienced anything weird. I liked that it didn’t gate all the traffic shaping, new user notifications, and security behind a subscription paywall.


I don’t have an easy answer. Amazon was the 1 ton gorilla in the room so that was the one I was familiar with, but I will try to update this comment as I find information out.
Kobo: Seems like it’s yours to keep without resale or transfer rights. (https://download.kobobooks.com/learnmore/kobo1_pdf/Kobo_eReader_Terms_of_Use.pdf)
Google: Yours to keep provided the authorized agent and Google themselves maintain rights to provide it. (https://books.google.com/intl/en/googlebooks/tos.html)
B&N Nook: seems to be more in line with Amazon (https://www.nook.com/services/cms/doc/us/en_us/legal/nook-store-terms.html#ItemsPurchases)
Smashwords: seems more like ownership without transferability. (https://www.smashwords.com/about/tos)


According to the terms, when you purchase a Kindle e-book, you are buying a license to access the content rather than owning the book outright. And the only reason they made it explicit is CA law AB 2426. So you can “access” it on any device that can display their content, be it an app or hardware device, but you can’t possess it via a download for example. (I find this all to be bullshit, I’m just stating Amazon’s position on the topic)
This is a big part of why I have a kobo, the files are easy to scrub of the DRM but I’m still getting an easy way to throw money at creators I value.


Do you have access to an old kindle device? That makes it pretty easy with Calibre and the noDRM plugin.
It was easier when you could download it to your computer, but Amazon disabled that last year because so many people were removing the DRM.


I use kobo because I have a kobo reader and you can import any epub into their app and it will work great. Otherwise I like Yomu, it’s got a nice and clean interface.


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It’s still more feature rich than Nano, with things like macros and multi-file search/replace from the command line though since I started using it, Nano has taken up some of the slack.


I was unfamiliar with wordtsar, that’s amazing.


While I can use Emacs and Vim (adequately enough) I really feel in love with Joe back when I was first learning Unix.
(I did have a phase where I used WordStar and VisiCalc long after they were surpassed by others.)


No one even uses Vim anymore, you should just switch to Wordpad. It’s far superior cause you can type in bold and italics.
😎
Look at how often grindr crashes during right wing events. It’s already political, maybe just not in the back end.