Ayy Moonreader+, I use that one too. So responsive.
Ayy Moonreader+, I use that one too. So responsive.
For downloading, I use Readarr or manually download from where I buy the books. A lot of the time the books I buy have DRM so I end up pirating them anyway 🤷. When readarr sends a book to calibre, it tells it to convert it so I’ve always got epub and mobi available.
For accessing my library, I use calibre-server, which I think comes bundled with the calibre desktop app. It’s got a basic web interface for uploading, editing some metadata, and downloading; and an OPDS API which my e-reader can use to download books. If I’m outside my home network I use my VPN to access it because I don’t trust calibre to be secure enough for internet exposure lol.
Don’t recall why I chose this instead of calibre-web but it works fine for my purposes. I don’t read comics though.
The support person even said they don’t see any queries in the logs, you’d think that would be a clue to send the logs including queries.
(never played an AC game before) The lesson I took from the tutorial boss is that you should use the right weapon for the job, i.e. the build matters a lot. I wasn’t getting anywhere with anything but the sword.
Yeah I bounced off it the first time, then I tried taking notes while reading it and enjoyed it much more.
Common sense would surely say that becoming a for-profit company or whatever they did would mean they’ve breached that law. I assume they figured out a way around it or I’ve misunderstood something though.
I use Moon+ Reader. It’s not open source but it’s so snappy; page changes are instant and scrolling is flawless. It connects to my calibre server too. Android only I think.
There are roleplay servers for modded RDR2 online (RedM) where you can actually do this. I just started playing on one with some mates and it’s a player driven economy, so if people need wood they either have to chop it themselves or someone has to do it for them. I haven’t tried it personally but you start with an axe and there seem to be areas where you can chop wood. I just like wandering about picking flowers and saying yeehaw to people.
tealdeer takes up 3.7MB on my system. It’s a rust implementation of tldr
- simplified man pages with practical examples. If I want to do some common thing with a program I don’t use very often, chances are I can type (e.g.) tldr kill
and it’ll tell me what I need to know.
Yeah I love hardcover, I only wish it were a little easier to create & see the private notes I’ve written for a book. They’re tucked away in the review page at the moment. Apart from that it’s great, does everything I need with a nice interface.