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by sliverstorm
5730 days ago
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If you are concerned you will not be able to download them in the future, archive them now. With sane file storage and backups, you can keep them around. I have managed to hang on to files I made when I was 12 all the way up to present adulthood; surely an adult can manage to do the same. (hint: it's a lot easier to do once you accept the dominance of .doc and .jpg, and sign up for Dropbox) As for Kindles only lasting a few years- they may introduce a new version, but the beauty of computers as appliances is they will last as long as their battery and 120 volts hang around. I have an ipod from the beginning of ipods; the only reason I haven't repaired the battery is I no longer depend on it to listen to music. Lastly, before you worry if your Kindle will last for the decades-to-centuries range, and elect to use books instead, recall that books themselves must be carefully printed, stored and used to last 50 years. |
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It's a good job that some of the stuff before Windows95 actually got printed out.
ps. suppose Amazon decide to stop Kindle, or get a better deal from the publisher - or just decide all your existing ebooks don't work on kindle 4. Just like Walmart did with their online music service. With the wonders of DRM you can't back up a copy of the ebook, it only works as long as Amazon's licence servers work.