Coming from Newpipe, it is a step up appearance and featurewise.
Coming from Newpipe, it is a step up appearance and featurewise.
They started doing that with discs back in mid-2010 along with videogames. Not surprised that it’s just papers now.
Current streaming has messed up the popularity of legal cord cutting. There’s no real difference in cable and streaming anymore.
Replaced the Forbes site with another site with the same topic.
Just english
On Anna’s archive I see volumes 1-7 as cbr files. You probably did this already, but there are multiple mirrors to the same files to choose if one doesn’t work right. All the libgen.li files 1-12 are on there as cbr, too.
The best way to make a complete volume is to do this manually:
Cbr is just a rar file for comic books and cbz is a zip file. My android tablet can extract rar and zip folders natively.
For Windows, you may have to use WinRAR or something else if you are using a computer. You will have to have show file extensions on to do this step.
You can do this to make it easier:
1_foldername 2_foldername
*I am unsure if it will work, but to see a thumbnail for the complete volume you could put a single picture file in the main folder.
They should all be in order!
I thought it was individual authors suing and I could see why they wouldn’t want their works being on Internet Archive. Seeing how it’s actually the most popular book publishers…
A real library is expensive to maintain and adding new additions means even more money with fees and buying more copies if a title is very popular. The public libraries I’ve been to have been empty even right before COVID. I can’t see physical libraries lasting much longer, especially with book bans and defunding.
Most libraries are now hooked up to Libby and rely on ebook licenses for their own library. Ebook licenses are the worst because most popular books are leased on a time limit or cycles (amount of people that read the copy). So if they have something really popular like Harry Potter, that could add up really quick depending.
It’s just like how music streaming services are paying musicians and singers peanuts for their streamed songs while the companies get everything else. Authors already don’t make enough money on royalties as it is, so this is all to line the publisher’s pockets more than anything.
Hope that somebody else will preserve what the Internet Archive can’t in spite of these greedy companies. This along with old recorded music is getting ridiculous.