Since my last summer update, we have had no rain at all - so it is very dry now, and wildfires have started popping up in our province (and others in eastern Canada). That has put the brakes on pretty much any outdoor activity that one might do in the woods. All crown land is closed to camping, and local parks have closed their trails. It's still possible to enjoy the water, so my wife and I have been doing more kayaking. The rivers and lakes are low, but still fine for boating. Hopefully we get some rain soon. ~ Ian at gopher.icu talks about books, specifically physical books and their advantages [0]. He mentions a phlog post where the author passed up some O'Reilly books in a thrift shop. I remember reading that post as well, which made me think that the author was crazy to pass those up (I don't have the link to it, unfortunately). Anyway, although I've pared down my library over the years [1][2], among the few technical books I've kept were the O'Reilly ones - they were simply the best resources on Unix/Linux topics from the 1990's and early to mid 2000's. I kept Unix Power Tools, Vi and Vim Editors, Bash Cookbook, Classic Shell Scripting, Mastering Regular Expressions, and some of their Perl books. I do have a printed copy of the FSF's 'Effective AWK Programming', but I've preferred Perl to AWK over the years, and so kept more books on the former. I agree with Ian that reading paper is easier on the eyes, apart from e-ink, but ebooks have their own issues - the loss of control that he brings up, but also cost and DRM [3][4]. [0]: gopher://gopher.icu/0/phlog/Philosophical-ramblings/Hard-copy-and-physical-media.md [1]: gopher://republic.circumlunar.space/0/~slugmax/phlog/phlog_archives_2017-2019/books [2]: gopher://republic.circumlunar.space/0/~slugmax/phlog/phlog_archives_2017-2019/downtime [3]: gopher://republic.circumlunar.space/0/~slugmax/phlog/phlog_archives/ebooks-cost-too-much [4]: gopher://republic.circumlunar.space/0/~slugmax/phlog/phlog_archives/ebooks_still_too_expensive