For the books I love and want to read over and over, physical. For the books I want to read once and maybe reference from time to time, digital all the way. My e-reader makes digital books a breeze to read, and I'm actually at the point where it's 5GB of storage isn't enough for my library.
mrwiggles
https://bennycheung.github.io/ask-a-book-questions-with-langchain-openai
https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain
Essentially, you cut the pdf/text file up into chunks, process it to embeddings, then ask the AI questions and it responds with the relevant segments of the book
Hook it up to Langchain with Python and ask a book questions.
As someone in their 30's who didn't take care of my teeth for a while, I'm going to have to second this recommendation. It will save you a lot of grief down the road.
Its thought that dogs can tell the passage of time through scent. I'd be surprised if cats didn't do something similar
This is what I use Foreman and Katello for. Package mirror with x versions synced automatically with all my machines subscribed. Or it would be, if I ever got around to actually setting the damn thing up. I have a debian package repo and a few things subscribed, but I'd like to add more.
I think your best bet in this case is google drive. Most people have a google account, and if they don't, I believe it's possible to set it up in a way that it will let them upload anyway. I don't think you're getting out of the account requirement, outside of you setting up an anonymous ftp server in a vps or something.
This is the result of the death of isps as net-neutral carriers.
OPNsense for the win! It's so powerful, I love it.
Except, what it produces is very similar or identical to some copyrighted works, licensed under the LGPL, like in this case. You don't have to copy a whole program to plagiarize someone
And this is why you password protect your ssh keys