Well, to say the truth, I use Unix/Linux mostly in work, not at home, because Windows simply... work. And most programs are made for them. And I use Linux KDE too, but mostly because I made some custom scripts and created some icons, which help me connect to remote servers with two clicks. That's where command line can't win, if you doing one action over and over again, you don't have to search for correct line, you can simply click on icon.
But on the eReader side: It just occured me, RobertB, that it would be very nice of eReaders if the software comming with it had some backing up utility - something like "click on this and all your books will be downloaded from eReader and stored where you want them". Maybe even creating an archive from them, zips are widely supported and it doesn't look like it will change.
Last edited by pkovak; 06-04-2009 at 01:06 AM.
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