piskov
9 hours ago
Tsundoku (積ん読) is the phenomenon of acquiring reading materials but letting them pile up in a home without reading them. The term is also used to refer to unread books on a bookshelf meant for reading later.
dunham
9 hours ago
do pdfs count?
% mdfind -onlyin ~ kind:pdf |wc -l
11116
(2k of those are in my directory of github checkouts and there are duplicates in there.)mindcrime
8 hours ago
They totally do! And epub, mobi, djvu...
prhodes@troubadour:~/Downloads/pdfs$ find . -name "*.pdf" | wc -l
18952
prhodes@troubadour:~/Downloads/pdfs$ find . -name "*.epub" | wc -l
2385
prhodes@troubadour:~/Downloads/pdfs$ find . -name "*.djvu" | wc -l
1384
prhodes@troubadour:~/Downloads/pdfs$ find . -name "*.mobi" | wc -l
125
(There are definitely duplicates in those, FWIW)NoMoreNicksLeft
6 hours ago
Why are you downloading mobi files? Seriously, I only do that if there is no epub, and only keep it long enough to convert it.
mindcrime
4 hours ago
Pretty much that. If the only copy I can find is .mobi.. or, occasionally perhaps, just by mistake.
dotancohen
7 hours ago
Is mdfind a Windows executable? Is there a standalone version that I might be able to use on the rare occasions I need to fight with somebody's Windows box?
dunham
6 hours ago
mdfind is the command line interface to macos "Spotlight", which is the global file index. So it can do things like full text search in addition to matching metadata values or size bigger than X.
I don't know windows well enough to know the equivalent. But I think there is an index on windows, and powershell may be able to poke at it.
dotancohen
5 hours ago
Thank you
Jtsummers
7 hours ago
mdfind is a built-in with macOS. It's similar to find (should be on your *nix system if you have one) which can be installed with Cygwin on Windows. On Windows, you'd use Powershell and Get-ChildItem (I don't think it's case sensitive, but I don't use PS much).
dotancohen
5 hours ago
Thank you
ternaryoperator
5 hours ago
Why do you make PDFs of github checkouts?
blackhaj7
9 hours ago
Nice!
Taleb calls it the anti-library
yulker
9 hours ago
Spiritually different intention, but both yield lots of unread material at hand. The parent's is "bought with best intentions" but letting it pile up despite that intention, Taleb's is purposefully accumulating material that you don't intend to read unless a future you finds it helpful to explore that book
f1shy
8 hours ago
This is what I do. When I see a free PDF that seems well written, or was suggested to me, I save it in the bucket “maybe someday I might need that” but l know I will 99% never read. My experience is that it is useful. At least 10 books that were deep in that bucket were useful for me, and ended reading them. I must have 10000 though.
dotancohen
7 hours ago
The time is not far where you'll be able to train an LLM on them, which will then present to you the information as you need it.
treetalker
8 hours ago
Research tool!
pessimizer
7 hours ago
I think it's way better to shop at a bookstore filled exclusively with stuff you've already shown interest in, like your bookshelf or ebook directory. The only caveat when it comes to paper is not to buy shit e.g. bestsellers, or software books that you're not going to read and use right away. If you don't buy shit (this is also true with board games and guitars), you can resell likely for about what you paid (or sometimes unexpectedly far more), whenever you want.
Honestly, don't ever buy bestsellers. They're all bad and everything in them is wrong. Things become bestsellers because they find an audience beyond people who are smart or shrewd. If you wait 5 years and you still want to read them, people will pay you to haul them off. Software books are great, especially for people who need paper to learn well, but they're outdated before they're released. Only good for tearing out the pages for hamster cage liner or padding shipping/moving boxes.
dotancohen
7 hours ago
> I think it's way better to shop at a bookstore filled exclusively with stuff you've already shown interest in
That sounds like quite the endorsement for targeted advertising. In a good way - really I would love targeted advertising if it were implemented differently.johnnyanmac
6 hours ago
Targeted ads are great, when it's actually consumer focused. Sadly the nature of modern ads makes it so all the power is taken from the consumer. A proper targeted ad should have the ability to say to it "I never want to see yo again", and virtually no advert would ever want that to happen.
pessimizer
7 hours ago
Pretty well-established that targeted advertising works better than untargeted advertising, all other things being equal.
I think you should put things in your bookshelf or collection of pdfs to hold off FOMO. When you finally get back around to being interested in Bosnian history, the books you wanted might be impossible to get. If you never get back around to it, you can help some stranger out who did.
I guess this is becoming less true with the libgens and annas-archives of the world, but when those all disappear on the same day (that seemed like any other), you'll have missed out. I certainly don't miss the days when I spent years waiting for a book to come up on ebay or used.addall.com at a price under $150.
johnnyanmac
6 hours ago
>Honestly, don't ever buy bestsellers. They're all bad and everything in them is wrong. Things become bestsellers because they find an audience beyond people who are smart or shrewd.
In the context of technical/political pieces, perhaps. But I have some reservations with even that limited scope
1. It's fine to target a more general audience if it gets them interested in a subject to begin with. Some inaccuracies help give context to learning before you break them. e.g. Saying "you can't subtract 3 from 2" in early learning, before later learning about the negative number space.
2. How many books of this nature even make best seller? Most stuff tends to be fiction or biographical so there's not much "wrong" there. Political stuff will be there as well, but is ultimately subjective.