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Old Yesterday, 07:57 PM   #872
DNSB
Bibliophagist
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Posts: 47,340
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Vancouver
Device: Kobo Sage, Libra Colour, Lenovo M8 FHD, Paperwhite 4, Tolino epos
Quote:
Originally Posted by issybird View Post
But I want to differentiate between buying ahead and backing up, two very different things. I stopped backing up when I was still in full acquisition mode when I had a lightbulb moment. I realized that the volatile ebook market had settled into essentially two purveyors, Kobo and Kindle, and that neither was going anywhere. The books I bought were going to be there to download to a tied device when I got around to them. That was the end of backing up, for me.
For me, one of the main reasons for backing up is that I've edited 99% of the ebooks in my library. For most books, it takes less than 5 minutes to generate an edited copy that fits my preferences. Drop caps, extra space between paragraphs, chapter headers that take half a page for blank space, embedded body fonts, etc. go away. Yes, the result is, typographically speaking, very boring (just a few short steps above reading a text document) but I look for excitement in the content not in the font and layout.

I realize that what takes me 5 minutes with the experience from 15 years of using Sigil and my collection of saved searches could take others much longer. And I am very thankful to Strahinja Val Marković, John Schember, Kevin Hendricks and Doug Massay for their work on Sigil.

Even if Kobo or Amazon still have the books available, it would take me more hours than I care to think about to recreate my edited copies. This, for me, makes backups a necessity. And since the backups are driven by a batch file spawned by a task scheduler entry, I don't need to do much other than a random test restore.
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