• grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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      2 hours ago

      Hmm. Maybe keeping a small library of your fav books in paper form might be nice. Then you can go grab one off the shelf to show friends and also lend them out to people who like/need that format!

      Like I keep coffee + paraphernalia even though I don’t drink it.

  • Rose@slrpnk.net
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    3 hours ago

    Sure, the guy has a ton of books in the shelves. But how many mysterious badly sorted storage boxes of books he has? Now that’s the real test of character.

    Also ask probing questions about how many obsolete programming books he has. It may get awkward but it has to be done.

  • toynbee@piefed.social
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    3 hours ago

    I have lots of books and prefer physical media. I’ve organized them various ways, mostly by author, then by series name and book number (if applicable), then by book title.

    I generally prefer mass market format because it’s easier to hold, but sometimes a collectible version is too tempting or, in other cases, the mass market option simply isn’t available. As a result, my library consists of a wide variety of shapes and sizes of books.

    Unfortunately, for assorted reasons, most of my library is in boxes right now. Less unfortunately, I haven’t been dating for a long time. However, back when I was dating and my literature was on shelves around my bedroom, sometimes I would bring a partner home and they would complain about my books not being arranged by size or, alternatively, by color.

    Of course they could setup their library however they wanted, but I did feel a bit of despair every time I heard this desire for form over function.

  • 1984@lemmy.today
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    7 hours ago

    I think books are cool. Anyone who read books is a cool person and not yet lost to social media addiction. They can still be in the moment with themselves.

    I had a period when I could not read a single page in a book because my mind was constantly wanting to use the phone instead. Many people are like that right now.

    • square@lemmy.zip
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      3 hours ago

      Yeah, I have zero in my house now. I have over 1k on my ereader, in my pocket, and on my tablet. Even when I read physical books I never had this many, every time I got to a couple hundred I’d take them to Goodwill for others to enjoy. My reading list is so long, it’s not like I’m likely to reread anything. Every book I reread is one other book I won’t get to read before I die.

      I see bookshelves like this these days it’s like someone with a lot of vinyl. They’re either old (old to me and I’m almost 50), or just into an old format for some reason. Nothing wrong with that, it just doesn’t mean the same thing it used to.

  • Mikina@programming.dev
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    20 hours ago

    I knew I recognized him from somewhere.

    I have no idea who he is, but this is my favorite quote ever, as someone who’s both a goth/punk poser and works in cybersecurity.

  • Hanrahan@slrpnk.net
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    14 hours ago

    ok boomer

    i gave away 99% of my books outside a few reference books, I have 1000s of books on an elibary, managed on Caliber and read them on a Kobo. i can and do also use the overdrive app to read library books on my kobo. I also have a library card and visit regularly.

    He can live in a memorial room to dead trees

  • homes@piefed.world
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    21 hours ago

    Once I offered to buy John Waters a drink, and the bartender got offended

    Edit: at the very idea that John Waters would ever be charged for a drink