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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 18th, 2023

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  • Every book has a unique number used to identify them, the ISBN (International Standard Book Number). If you can figure out the ISBN of a book, it becomes an easy search term for piracy, because now you aren’t looking for a long title, you’re looking for a unique number!
    Most bookstores will list the ISBN of a book on their website, so that step should be pretty easy.

    Then to commit the piracy, you can often just google the ISBN + filetype:pdf and get a free PDF pretty frequently.
    There is also library genesis (libgen), where you can look up pirated books via their ISBN, which has a super wide selection.
    And if even libgen does not have it, you can try torrent trackers (read up more on !piracy )

    Of course most of those options are legally questionable or illegal depending on where you live, and I of course would not recommend you actually perform them ;)



  • Ive never used githubs CI/CD, but gitlab has quite a large ecosystem for its CI/CD.
    Seems to me like you could use gitlab as a one-stop-shop to host everything from your code to your artifacts and containers, if you are willing to pay for those fancy features

    Free is able to just do basic CI/CD for like 250 minutes a month, or unlimited via your own runners/build servers, thats about it