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#91 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#92 | |
Still reading
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Location: Ireland
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2) Unlimited is a myth. See Fair Usage. Initially the Microwave link had a 20Gbyte rolling 30 days cap. Then 6OG, then 350Gbyte, no doubt as more users migrated to adsl, vdsl and fibre. The Fibre has a 3500Gbyte "fair use" rolling 30 days. If you occasionally go over likely nothing happens. If you are making a copy of the Internet or selfhosting a popular site, then there are likely to be sanctions. Mostly the 8/1 Mbyte package and the cap was fine, because none of us watched videos or subscribed to streaming. I did download a free Steam Game at over 40Gbytes. It was under 10 minutes and could have been 30 days on dial-up. But how much can you download before running out of local storage? I've considered downloading ALL of Gutenberg and having sync, feasible if you pick one format. Multiple people in a shared dwelling with HD streaming subs would certainly need fibre. |
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#93 | |
Custom User Title
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A friend of mine has like 5 terabytes of games on a WD Black. But to be fair, games are getting pretty big these days -- 350 gb for ARK: Survival Evolved, for instance. Last edited by ownedbycats; 03-23-2023 at 03:57 PM. |
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#94 | ||
Still reading
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Linux: Quote:
Last edited by Quoth; 03-23-2023 at 04:22 PM. |
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#95 |
Bibliophagist
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For me, streaming and downloading files (some of the files I download are in the 25-50GB range) for system updates, etc. (work has a 2GB up/down speed.) For my wife, streaming and video chats, for the kids, gaming is the bandwidth hog. The latest games on the XBox or PS machines chew up bandwidth like we got it for free. A recent check while watching a 4K NHL game clocked in at 43MBps just for that one connection.
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#96 |
Wizard
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For centuries a "book" was defined as a number of flat things bound together on one side. It was 100% about the container and 0% about the contents. We still have match books, coupon books, note books, books of paint or carpet samples,... none of which are sold as reading material. Now, I have read the opposite definition right in this thread, that books are 0% about the container and 100% about the contents. I think things got confused when books became the ubiquitous way of distributing reading material, and people started using the name of the container for the contents. I always feel a bit sad when language evolves towards less information, but I guess I can't complain when the information that is disappearing doesn't matter to most people anymore.
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#97 |
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What we call a book was called a Codex and replaced the scroll. It allowed random access and easier use of both sides of the material.
The scrolls replaced clay tablets, which have survived better. Burning down the town makes the tablets more durable. Strictly speaking the content isn't a book. The content is a novel, play, poetry, short stories, recipes, reports, catalogues, patterns, learning material etc. A book has leaves and a binding. An ebook is an electronic format content that could be printed, which is why if it's interactive, has audio or video it's not an ebook, it's multimedia. An ebook has no concept of matching a printed page, or it's broken. It must be dynamically paginated to match the window or screen size. Web sites ought to have this as an option. Blame Tim Berners-Lee (1989-1992) for not properly copying earlier hypertext systems that did dynamically paginate. Concept from 1968 and implementations from 1980s. A PDF is an electronic document intended to be exactly printed or exactly match the printed version. The page size is the paper page size. For a long time newspapers and books were archive on roll film and then microfiche. I used a microfiche display unit made by Bell & Howell and it made the tiny image about 12" square using a strong lamp and back-projection. There were also laser disk archives for a while. The Laser disk player was controlled by a PC. They used analogue video. The first ebooks were distributed on floppies, then CDs and then sometimes on DVD. Finally downloads replaced physical distribution though some sites do still sell CD, DVD and USB sticks. An Album was originally a book of blank pages for clippings. Then photos. It was used from 1890s to mean a book of card envelopes for the 4 to 10 disks of a concert recording, then from 1931 for the 33 rpm large disks played from centre with 78rpm style material for the sound track of movies. 1948 or 1947 was the release of the microgroove LP that could hold an entire album of 78s on its two sides, so it was called an Album. The RCA 45rpm EP replaced 78 singles at home and in juke boxes from about 1949. Words change their meanings. A computer used to be a person that did sums all day. A typewriter was the person that used a typing machine (Victorian). A facsimile was originally any kind of exact copy of a document, but from 1851 was applied to documents sent by wire, eventually abbreviated to fax. Last edited by Quoth; 03-23-2023 at 07:34 PM. |
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#98 | |
Custom User Title
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![]() I'm not sure which thought is funnier - that people were pissed off enough to burn down his house (and thus accidentally fire the tablets), or that he wanted to preserve the tablets... |
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#99 | ||
eReader Wrangler
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The word "book" comes from an ancient Saxon word for "beech" (the tree) because the ancient Germans and Saxons wrote runes on pieces of "beechen" board. An eBook (when read with a computer) simulates a book, but it's not the same, and an eBook doesn't stand on its own. The reason I'm going through all this is that I'm trying to make you understand why people refer to paper books as "real books." And that, to them, it's almost never intended to be snarky — it's just that a paper book is tangible — they can hold it in their hands. And that's all I'm trying to say. |
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#100 | |
eReader Wrangler
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No, a book is a book (and remains a book until crumbles into dust or is destroyed). It's existence doesn't depend on whether someone reads it or not. Just as a tree remains a tree whether or not anyone sees it. |
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#101 | |
Still reading
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Oddly a cassette tape based audio book is handier for users than a CD, because it inherently has position moved between players. Of course a cassette has to be recorded but a CD is pressed, a digital version of the 1890s disks and like 1930s sound track disks has a single spiral groove played from the centre end. Last edited by Quoth; 03-24-2023 at 06:20 AM. |
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#102 | ||||||||
Grand Sorcerer
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I have no problem with the dictionary definition of book. Here is another one: Quote:
But if you are talking about a book on MR, or in a modern context, "a book is a pbook" seems like an archaic definition. |
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#103 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Last edited by DiapDealer; 03-24-2023 at 07:34 AM. |
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#104 | |
Resident Curmudgeon
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#105 | |
Resident Curmudgeon
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