Community Hangout
I see now. So, NOT by Kim Stanley Robinson, then.
At last the weather is summer-ish in Denmark. It has been a cold Spring up to now. Now I can have my windows open all the time without freezing.
Here in the UK we are enjoying mild but wet weather for the next few weeks. Our two greyhounds will both be wearing their coats to keep them warm and dry when they are out for their daily walk as the breed doesn't have enough body fat to help them deal with the cold. As they prefer grass to pavement we will be breaking out the wellies and heading out to some green space for daily exercise.
Our dogs love their walks and pay us back with love and devotion when they are not sleeping (which is quite a lot).
davidjharder What kind of running do you like?
I like running Solus. Well, you know, I do run very rarely. Wanna start to do it more frequently though. I kind of have the feeling that running might be the right thing for me. It's one if my favorite movie scenes when Forrest Gump just starts running and keeps running for days and days and days. Often though, I just feel too low on energy to actually just go out and so some sports. Maybe I need to adjust my nutrition.
I have the suspicion that I might rather be a long distance runner than a sprinter.
Do you run marathon?
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WetGeek It surprised me that, although Red Mars cost a typical $3.95 (for an ebook), Blue Mars was $12.95 (!), and Green Mars $5.95. Still, just about $25 for all three, which I still consider a bargain.
Now you got me intrigued and I wanna read those Mars books. I read a lot online, but books not that much lately. I am just about to cancel my kindle unlimited subscription. Would have been much cheaper to buy the 3 books I STARTED to read than pay like 11 € per month. And off course, most books I wanna read aren't included in unlimited anyways. Same for the Mars trilogy. All 3 cost about 18 € as e-book for me. I really would like to know why they charge 2,99 for the first, 4,49 for the second and 9,99 for the third.
Yesterday we had like 26 degrees celsius and 9 hour sunshine here in the very western part of Germany, near the Netherlands. And now we are down to 13 and not so much sunshine for the next 10 days or so
Sebastian I really would like to know why they charge 2,99 for the first, 4,49 for the second and 9,99 for the third.
I wish I could answer that, too. Maybe because the first gets you wanting more, and by the time you finish the second, there's just one more in the series, so there's strong temptation to buy it regardless of the cost.
We're obviously in two different markets, so it's likely that our costs for things like ebooks will be different. But I thought I'd mention that the Nook app is free, and it's a great library manager and ebook reader. If you have a Barnes and Noble store available to you, you might find that Nook books are a reasonable alternative to Kindle books. And it's possible that more books that you want are available from there. It's worth a look.
Sebastian Yeah, I do more long distance running. Trying to be super fast over 5km never feels very fun to me.
The only way to get better at running is to run , never too late to start.
WetGeek If you have a Barnes and Noble store available to you, you might find that Nook books are a reasonable alternative to Kindle books. And it's possible that more books that you want are available from there. It's worth a look.
Yay. I found a german Web-Shop where I could buy the complete Mars trilogy in english as epub for 9,42€.
Am able to read it on my kindle now
Sebastian I could buy the complete Mars trilogy in english as epub for 9,42€.
Wow! Congratulations - that's quite a bargain. I'm going to start on it as soon as I finish my current mystery novel. I'm at chapter 29 now, so surely it can't be much longer. I originally read that trilogy so many decades ago that it will be like reading it for the first time again.
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There is by the way a very interesting talk of Richard Stallman he gave 2001 at MIT about Copyrights and eBooks where he explains how publishers use eBooks to take away and restrict rights you had with a paper copy.
Like, you could lend it to your friend, sell it, or easily copy it. In fact, that's how books got distributed in ancient times: by manually copying them.
The talk is absolutely worthwhile listening.
I actually remember how I listened to the talk in amazement some 20 years ago.
I'm going to buy a new computer here soon. I'll go with AMD GPU instead of Nvidia for the first time (if you don't count TNT and Voodoo in that equation). I was thinking a AMD 7700 for gaming and other stuff. But I have no idea how AMD GPUs perform on Linux or in general.
davidjharder I see only good things for you! LOL... That trilogy is NOT the End All, Be All, (close tho) but its a great place to start. Robinson also has the Science in the Capital series, Three California series, and numerous stand-alone novels and short stories. I really like the contents of his head, and if he isnt political, then he is certainly adjacent and readable. I would be interested to know who ends up being your favorite charactor once you finish the trilogy!
davidjharder Running on Mars! lol, sorry = )
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Sebastian I actually remember how I listened to the talk in amazement some 20 years ago.
I'm quite happy to give up those advantages for the ones I get with ebooks. I have about 3,600 books on each of two 10" tablets, one upstairs by my bed for reading myself to sleep, and one downstairs for continuing a story I've started elsewhere. That one's handy for doctors' waiting rooms, etc. And when I start the downstairs tablet, I get a prompt to move to the page last read in the upstairs tablet, before I put it down and went to sleep. They're connected to the same wi-fi network, you see, so they can talk to each other, and they do.
Although the bookstore is nowhere near my house, after I've made an online purchase, like yesterday, the books are almost immediately available in my library. I don't need to drive somewhere to buy them, pick them up, and cart them home, or pay extra to have them shipped here.
My granddaughter is a fan of the same sci-fi and mystries that I enjoy, and B&N makes it easy to move books I've read from my library to hers, so they can be lent. When she's done with them, they're moved back to my library, so they remain mine.
Many authors of ebooks - even bestselling ones - like to make the first ebook in a series available for free, in order to attract readers to the universe and characters of that series. I've gotten many very interesting reads for free, and many times I've gone on to purchase other books from that series, so it works well for both authors and readers. And if I can't get "into" a story, or don't appreciate a new authors writing style, that first look has cost me nothing but a bit of time. And the books that I do buy typically cost $2.99 to $4.99 each, instead of $12 to $25 as bound books. I believe I once read that B&N has 50,000+ free ebooks to choose from, but it's probably far more than that by now.
If I had to store my 3.600 volume library in physical space in my home, it would require many bookcases. And they would be mostly full of books I'd never care to read again - even the ones I'd enjoyed very much. Instead, my library fits on a thin tablet with room to spare. I can easily carry the entire library with me (those millions of 1's and 0's don't weigh much at all), and the reader software makes it easy to find and select a book that I may have acquired years ago, and am just now getting around to reading.
The tablet provides its own reading light, so when I read myself to sleep at night, I can do so without keeping my wife awake. And I adjust the brightness and backlight color to values that don't keep me awake, either. Reading for a while - usually a chapter or two, depending on the book - allows me to relax and drift off to sleep without any drugs. It's the best answer I've ever found to insomnia.
I'm sure I'll think of other advantages to ebooks as soon as I post this, but I'm pretty sure I've made my case by now. And much as I admire Richard Stallman, his opinions about ebooks may have evolved quite a bit during the last 23 years.
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No food photos in this thread. 0/10
SethStorm666 At last the weather is summer-ish in Denmark.
The weather is still wet-ish here in the US Pacific Northwest, after a rather dry-ish winter. The snowpack in the mountains is nowhere near as deep as it should be, and local governments are talking about a coming draught. Fortunately, that's mostly what comes of it - talk. But indoors, it's been very pleasant. There's been no need to turn on the air conditioner so far.
It's been said that we don't have weather here, instead we have climate. And our climate is the origin of "WetGeek." He's a software engineer from a place where it's been said to rain all the time. That's an exaggeration, of course. It just rains during fall, winter, and spring, not all the time.