Safest way to carry ebooks outdoors?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP











up vote
15
down vote

favorite
1












There are a number of hazards that can kill electronic products (water, impact). We want to take a few ebooks with us (i.e. plant & animal identification, directions, trails info, etc).



Assume non-DRM ebooks. While it is possible to purchase one copy and share it between multiple devices, there may be legal issues.



I am thinking either a micro SD card or thumb drive, would be optimal but I don't know.



Short of having copies of everything on every device, what is the storage medium that will be least likely to fail and most transferable between similar devices?







share|improve this question
















  • 2




    This would be a better fit on superuser.com
    – paparazzo
    Aug 27 at 15:34






  • 7




    @paparazzo I am not sure; out of scope = electronic devices, media players, cell phones or smart phones, except insofar as they interface with your computer,
    – James Jenkins
    Aug 27 at 15:36







  • 1




    I've taken my mark 1 kindle on holidays every year since they came out. It has been in rain, humidity, on beaches, next to pools. It's been dropped, sat on, you name it. Works perfectly... that said, I also have a Corsair Survivor USB drive. It's "guaranteed" to survive everything!
    – Rory Alsop♦
    Aug 27 at 15:42






  • 2




    Are there any eReaders that are going to take a full-sized USB drive? It seems like you're going to be limited to an SD card unless you're reading the books on a computer. I guess my point is the storage medium is going to be determined by the devices that use it rather than the environment.
    – JPhi
    Aug 27 at 20:14











  • why do you assume that keeping a copy on a device is legally problematic, but keeping a copy on a memory card is fine ?
    – Rsf
    Aug 28 at 9:30














up vote
15
down vote

favorite
1












There are a number of hazards that can kill electronic products (water, impact). We want to take a few ebooks with us (i.e. plant & animal identification, directions, trails info, etc).



Assume non-DRM ebooks. While it is possible to purchase one copy and share it between multiple devices, there may be legal issues.



I am thinking either a micro SD card or thumb drive, would be optimal but I don't know.



Short of having copies of everything on every device, what is the storage medium that will be least likely to fail and most transferable between similar devices?







share|improve this question
















  • 2




    This would be a better fit on superuser.com
    – paparazzo
    Aug 27 at 15:34






  • 7




    @paparazzo I am not sure; out of scope = electronic devices, media players, cell phones or smart phones, except insofar as they interface with your computer,
    – James Jenkins
    Aug 27 at 15:36







  • 1




    I've taken my mark 1 kindle on holidays every year since they came out. It has been in rain, humidity, on beaches, next to pools. It's been dropped, sat on, you name it. Works perfectly... that said, I also have a Corsair Survivor USB drive. It's "guaranteed" to survive everything!
    – Rory Alsop♦
    Aug 27 at 15:42






  • 2




    Are there any eReaders that are going to take a full-sized USB drive? It seems like you're going to be limited to an SD card unless you're reading the books on a computer. I guess my point is the storage medium is going to be determined by the devices that use it rather than the environment.
    – JPhi
    Aug 27 at 20:14











  • why do you assume that keeping a copy on a device is legally problematic, but keeping a copy on a memory card is fine ?
    – Rsf
    Aug 28 at 9:30












up vote
15
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
15
down vote

favorite
1






1





There are a number of hazards that can kill electronic products (water, impact). We want to take a few ebooks with us (i.e. plant & animal identification, directions, trails info, etc).



Assume non-DRM ebooks. While it is possible to purchase one copy and share it between multiple devices, there may be legal issues.



I am thinking either a micro SD card or thumb drive, would be optimal but I don't know.



Short of having copies of everything on every device, what is the storage medium that will be least likely to fail and most transferable between similar devices?







share|improve this question












There are a number of hazards that can kill electronic products (water, impact). We want to take a few ebooks with us (i.e. plant & animal identification, directions, trails info, etc).



Assume non-DRM ebooks. While it is possible to purchase one copy and share it between multiple devices, there may be legal issues.



I am thinking either a micro SD card or thumb drive, would be optimal but I don't know.



Short of having copies of everything on every device, what is the storage medium that will be least likely to fail and most transferable between similar devices?









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Aug 27 at 15:18









James Jenkins

15.4k553146




15.4k553146







  • 2




    This would be a better fit on superuser.com
    – paparazzo
    Aug 27 at 15:34






  • 7




    @paparazzo I am not sure; out of scope = electronic devices, media players, cell phones or smart phones, except insofar as they interface with your computer,
    – James Jenkins
    Aug 27 at 15:36







  • 1




    I've taken my mark 1 kindle on holidays every year since they came out. It has been in rain, humidity, on beaches, next to pools. It's been dropped, sat on, you name it. Works perfectly... that said, I also have a Corsair Survivor USB drive. It's "guaranteed" to survive everything!
    – Rory Alsop♦
    Aug 27 at 15:42






  • 2




    Are there any eReaders that are going to take a full-sized USB drive? It seems like you're going to be limited to an SD card unless you're reading the books on a computer. I guess my point is the storage medium is going to be determined by the devices that use it rather than the environment.
    – JPhi
    Aug 27 at 20:14











  • why do you assume that keeping a copy on a device is legally problematic, but keeping a copy on a memory card is fine ?
    – Rsf
    Aug 28 at 9:30












  • 2




    This would be a better fit on superuser.com
    – paparazzo
    Aug 27 at 15:34






  • 7




    @paparazzo I am not sure; out of scope = electronic devices, media players, cell phones or smart phones, except insofar as they interface with your computer,
    – James Jenkins
    Aug 27 at 15:36







  • 1




    I've taken my mark 1 kindle on holidays every year since they came out. It has been in rain, humidity, on beaches, next to pools. It's been dropped, sat on, you name it. Works perfectly... that said, I also have a Corsair Survivor USB drive. It's "guaranteed" to survive everything!
    – Rory Alsop♦
    Aug 27 at 15:42






  • 2




    Are there any eReaders that are going to take a full-sized USB drive? It seems like you're going to be limited to an SD card unless you're reading the books on a computer. I guess my point is the storage medium is going to be determined by the devices that use it rather than the environment.
    – JPhi
    Aug 27 at 20:14











  • why do you assume that keeping a copy on a device is legally problematic, but keeping a copy on a memory card is fine ?
    – Rsf
    Aug 28 at 9:30







2




2




This would be a better fit on superuser.com
– paparazzo
Aug 27 at 15:34




This would be a better fit on superuser.com
– paparazzo
Aug 27 at 15:34




7




7




@paparazzo I am not sure; out of scope = electronic devices, media players, cell phones or smart phones, except insofar as they interface with your computer,
– James Jenkins
Aug 27 at 15:36





@paparazzo I am not sure; out of scope = electronic devices, media players, cell phones or smart phones, except insofar as they interface with your computer,
– James Jenkins
Aug 27 at 15:36





1




1




I've taken my mark 1 kindle on holidays every year since they came out. It has been in rain, humidity, on beaches, next to pools. It's been dropped, sat on, you name it. Works perfectly... that said, I also have a Corsair Survivor USB drive. It's "guaranteed" to survive everything!
– Rory Alsop♦
Aug 27 at 15:42




I've taken my mark 1 kindle on holidays every year since they came out. It has been in rain, humidity, on beaches, next to pools. It's been dropped, sat on, you name it. Works perfectly... that said, I also have a Corsair Survivor USB drive. It's "guaranteed" to survive everything!
– Rory Alsop♦
Aug 27 at 15:42




2




2




Are there any eReaders that are going to take a full-sized USB drive? It seems like you're going to be limited to an SD card unless you're reading the books on a computer. I guess my point is the storage medium is going to be determined by the devices that use it rather than the environment.
– JPhi
Aug 27 at 20:14





Are there any eReaders that are going to take a full-sized USB drive? It seems like you're going to be limited to an SD card unless you're reading the books on a computer. I guess my point is the storage medium is going to be determined by the devices that use it rather than the environment.
– JPhi
Aug 27 at 20:14













why do you assume that keeping a copy on a device is legally problematic, but keeping a copy on a memory card is fine ?
– Rsf
Aug 28 at 9:30




why do you assume that keeping a copy on a device is legally problematic, but keeping a copy on a memory card is fine ?
– Rsf
Aug 28 at 9:30










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
15
down vote



accepted










I would just get a waterproof case for whatever electronic device you have the books on and then a waterproof/impact resistant USB flash drive for the books.



SD cards are more breakable and prone to getting lost or misplaced than USB flash drives.



A quick price checks says you can get a




Water proof to 200M through the use of a EPDM waterproof seal
Protected from vibration or impact damage through the use of a molded shock damping collar




Source



For around $20, so that seems like the way to go.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2




    Bear in mind, there is no guarantee your device will survive. I rafted down the Grand Canyon over 3 weeks last november and from our group, 3 smartphones that doubled as cameras died even though they were in Lifeproof cases. I was amused that a bunch of whitewater guides going on a trip together would choose that option considering their experience. And ultimately my views were vindicated.
    – Gabriel C.
    Aug 27 at 20:47


















up vote
12
down vote













I own a waterproof smartphone and it works as an E-book reader.
I think there are also waterproof tablets, which will give you a bigger screen.
I do not know whether there are waterproof dedicated e-book readers, but there might be.



Both phones and tablets usually take SD cards, although not all will take all sizes so you need to be sure you have the right size for your phone or tablet.



If you look for an older model, 'last year', you will get a machine that is way better than you need for just an e-book reader, but for a modest price.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    While I do not believe Amazon manufactures waterproof Kindles there is a company that sells waterproofed Kindles. (Amazon's warranty is voided but they provide their own.)
    – Loren Pechtel
    Aug 27 at 20:14






  • 3




    Make sure you get the right sort of waterproof. Most devices described as "waterproof" would be more accurately called "spashproof": they're protected against incidental water contact. For outdoors use, you're probably looking for something rated IP67 (can survive falling into a stream) or IP68 (can survive falling into deeper bodies of water).
    – Mark
    Aug 27 at 20:29










  • @LorenPechtel Amazon's Kindle Oasis is waterproof (at least the 2nd gen is IPx8).
    – muru
    Aug 28 at 5:30






  • 1




    @gerrit But Amazon devices can read non-drm books just fine, can't they? I understood the question to mean that they already own drm-free copies of the books.
    – Nobody
    Aug 28 at 12:08






  • 2




    @gerrit kindles can read kindle format, PDFs and .mobi. It is important to note that they can't read epub; but you can easily use an online converter to convert your epubs to mobis and still read them DRM free.
    – Daniel Vestøl
    Aug 28 at 14:24










Your Answer







StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "395"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: false,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













 

draft saved


draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2foutdoors.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f20294%2fsafest-way-to-carry-ebooks-outdoors%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest






























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
15
down vote



accepted










I would just get a waterproof case for whatever electronic device you have the books on and then a waterproof/impact resistant USB flash drive for the books.



SD cards are more breakable and prone to getting lost or misplaced than USB flash drives.



A quick price checks says you can get a




Water proof to 200M through the use of a EPDM waterproof seal
Protected from vibration or impact damage through the use of a molded shock damping collar




Source



For around $20, so that seems like the way to go.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2




    Bear in mind, there is no guarantee your device will survive. I rafted down the Grand Canyon over 3 weeks last november and from our group, 3 smartphones that doubled as cameras died even though they were in Lifeproof cases. I was amused that a bunch of whitewater guides going on a trip together would choose that option considering their experience. And ultimately my views were vindicated.
    – Gabriel C.
    Aug 27 at 20:47















up vote
15
down vote



accepted










I would just get a waterproof case for whatever electronic device you have the books on and then a waterproof/impact resistant USB flash drive for the books.



SD cards are more breakable and prone to getting lost or misplaced than USB flash drives.



A quick price checks says you can get a




Water proof to 200M through the use of a EPDM waterproof seal
Protected from vibration or impact damage through the use of a molded shock damping collar




Source



For around $20, so that seems like the way to go.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2




    Bear in mind, there is no guarantee your device will survive. I rafted down the Grand Canyon over 3 weeks last november and from our group, 3 smartphones that doubled as cameras died even though they were in Lifeproof cases. I was amused that a bunch of whitewater guides going on a trip together would choose that option considering their experience. And ultimately my views were vindicated.
    – Gabriel C.
    Aug 27 at 20:47













up vote
15
down vote



accepted







up vote
15
down vote



accepted






I would just get a waterproof case for whatever electronic device you have the books on and then a waterproof/impact resistant USB flash drive for the books.



SD cards are more breakable and prone to getting lost or misplaced than USB flash drives.



A quick price checks says you can get a




Water proof to 200M through the use of a EPDM waterproof seal
Protected from vibration or impact damage through the use of a molded shock damping collar




Source



For around $20, so that seems like the way to go.






share|improve this answer














I would just get a waterproof case for whatever electronic device you have the books on and then a waterproof/impact resistant USB flash drive for the books.



SD cards are more breakable and prone to getting lost or misplaced than USB flash drives.



A quick price checks says you can get a




Water proof to 200M through the use of a EPDM waterproof seal
Protected from vibration or impact damage through the use of a molded shock damping collar




Source



For around $20, so that seems like the way to go.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 28 at 13:50









Community♦

1




1










answered Aug 27 at 15:31









Charlie Brumbaugh

39k14103224




39k14103224







  • 2




    Bear in mind, there is no guarantee your device will survive. I rafted down the Grand Canyon over 3 weeks last november and from our group, 3 smartphones that doubled as cameras died even though they were in Lifeproof cases. I was amused that a bunch of whitewater guides going on a trip together would choose that option considering their experience. And ultimately my views were vindicated.
    – Gabriel C.
    Aug 27 at 20:47













  • 2




    Bear in mind, there is no guarantee your device will survive. I rafted down the Grand Canyon over 3 weeks last november and from our group, 3 smartphones that doubled as cameras died even though they were in Lifeproof cases. I was amused that a bunch of whitewater guides going on a trip together would choose that option considering their experience. And ultimately my views were vindicated.
    – Gabriel C.
    Aug 27 at 20:47








2




2




Bear in mind, there is no guarantee your device will survive. I rafted down the Grand Canyon over 3 weeks last november and from our group, 3 smartphones that doubled as cameras died even though they were in Lifeproof cases. I was amused that a bunch of whitewater guides going on a trip together would choose that option considering their experience. And ultimately my views were vindicated.
– Gabriel C.
Aug 27 at 20:47





Bear in mind, there is no guarantee your device will survive. I rafted down the Grand Canyon over 3 weeks last november and from our group, 3 smartphones that doubled as cameras died even though they were in Lifeproof cases. I was amused that a bunch of whitewater guides going on a trip together would choose that option considering their experience. And ultimately my views were vindicated.
– Gabriel C.
Aug 27 at 20:47











up vote
12
down vote













I own a waterproof smartphone and it works as an E-book reader.
I think there are also waterproof tablets, which will give you a bigger screen.
I do not know whether there are waterproof dedicated e-book readers, but there might be.



Both phones and tablets usually take SD cards, although not all will take all sizes so you need to be sure you have the right size for your phone or tablet.



If you look for an older model, 'last year', you will get a machine that is way better than you need for just an e-book reader, but for a modest price.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    While I do not believe Amazon manufactures waterproof Kindles there is a company that sells waterproofed Kindles. (Amazon's warranty is voided but they provide their own.)
    – Loren Pechtel
    Aug 27 at 20:14






  • 3




    Make sure you get the right sort of waterproof. Most devices described as "waterproof" would be more accurately called "spashproof": they're protected against incidental water contact. For outdoors use, you're probably looking for something rated IP67 (can survive falling into a stream) or IP68 (can survive falling into deeper bodies of water).
    – Mark
    Aug 27 at 20:29










  • @LorenPechtel Amazon's Kindle Oasis is waterproof (at least the 2nd gen is IPx8).
    – muru
    Aug 28 at 5:30






  • 1




    @gerrit But Amazon devices can read non-drm books just fine, can't they? I understood the question to mean that they already own drm-free copies of the books.
    – Nobody
    Aug 28 at 12:08






  • 2




    @gerrit kindles can read kindle format, PDFs and .mobi. It is important to note that they can't read epub; but you can easily use an online converter to convert your epubs to mobis and still read them DRM free.
    – Daniel Vestøl
    Aug 28 at 14:24














up vote
12
down vote













I own a waterproof smartphone and it works as an E-book reader.
I think there are also waterproof tablets, which will give you a bigger screen.
I do not know whether there are waterproof dedicated e-book readers, but there might be.



Both phones and tablets usually take SD cards, although not all will take all sizes so you need to be sure you have the right size for your phone or tablet.



If you look for an older model, 'last year', you will get a machine that is way better than you need for just an e-book reader, but for a modest price.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    While I do not believe Amazon manufactures waterproof Kindles there is a company that sells waterproofed Kindles. (Amazon's warranty is voided but they provide their own.)
    – Loren Pechtel
    Aug 27 at 20:14






  • 3




    Make sure you get the right sort of waterproof. Most devices described as "waterproof" would be more accurately called "spashproof": they're protected against incidental water contact. For outdoors use, you're probably looking for something rated IP67 (can survive falling into a stream) or IP68 (can survive falling into deeper bodies of water).
    – Mark
    Aug 27 at 20:29










  • @LorenPechtel Amazon's Kindle Oasis is waterproof (at least the 2nd gen is IPx8).
    – muru
    Aug 28 at 5:30






  • 1




    @gerrit But Amazon devices can read non-drm books just fine, can't they? I understood the question to mean that they already own drm-free copies of the books.
    – Nobody
    Aug 28 at 12:08






  • 2




    @gerrit kindles can read kindle format, PDFs and .mobi. It is important to note that they can't read epub; but you can easily use an online converter to convert your epubs to mobis and still read them DRM free.
    – Daniel Vestøl
    Aug 28 at 14:24












up vote
12
down vote










up vote
12
down vote









I own a waterproof smartphone and it works as an E-book reader.
I think there are also waterproof tablets, which will give you a bigger screen.
I do not know whether there are waterproof dedicated e-book readers, but there might be.



Both phones and tablets usually take SD cards, although not all will take all sizes so you need to be sure you have the right size for your phone or tablet.



If you look for an older model, 'last year', you will get a machine that is way better than you need for just an e-book reader, but for a modest price.






share|improve this answer












I own a waterproof smartphone and it works as an E-book reader.
I think there are also waterproof tablets, which will give you a bigger screen.
I do not know whether there are waterproof dedicated e-book readers, but there might be.



Both phones and tablets usually take SD cards, although not all will take all sizes so you need to be sure you have the right size for your phone or tablet.



If you look for an older model, 'last year', you will get a machine that is way better than you need for just an e-book reader, but for a modest price.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Aug 27 at 17:46









Willeke

1,7741225




1,7741225







  • 1




    While I do not believe Amazon manufactures waterproof Kindles there is a company that sells waterproofed Kindles. (Amazon's warranty is voided but they provide their own.)
    – Loren Pechtel
    Aug 27 at 20:14






  • 3




    Make sure you get the right sort of waterproof. Most devices described as "waterproof" would be more accurately called "spashproof": they're protected against incidental water contact. For outdoors use, you're probably looking for something rated IP67 (can survive falling into a stream) or IP68 (can survive falling into deeper bodies of water).
    – Mark
    Aug 27 at 20:29










  • @LorenPechtel Amazon's Kindle Oasis is waterproof (at least the 2nd gen is IPx8).
    – muru
    Aug 28 at 5:30






  • 1




    @gerrit But Amazon devices can read non-drm books just fine, can't they? I understood the question to mean that they already own drm-free copies of the books.
    – Nobody
    Aug 28 at 12:08






  • 2




    @gerrit kindles can read kindle format, PDFs and .mobi. It is important to note that they can't read epub; but you can easily use an online converter to convert your epubs to mobis and still read them DRM free.
    – Daniel Vestøl
    Aug 28 at 14:24












  • 1




    While I do not believe Amazon manufactures waterproof Kindles there is a company that sells waterproofed Kindles. (Amazon's warranty is voided but they provide their own.)
    – Loren Pechtel
    Aug 27 at 20:14






  • 3




    Make sure you get the right sort of waterproof. Most devices described as "waterproof" would be more accurately called "spashproof": they're protected against incidental water contact. For outdoors use, you're probably looking for something rated IP67 (can survive falling into a stream) or IP68 (can survive falling into deeper bodies of water).
    – Mark
    Aug 27 at 20:29










  • @LorenPechtel Amazon's Kindle Oasis is waterproof (at least the 2nd gen is IPx8).
    – muru
    Aug 28 at 5:30






  • 1




    @gerrit But Amazon devices can read non-drm books just fine, can't they? I understood the question to mean that they already own drm-free copies of the books.
    – Nobody
    Aug 28 at 12:08






  • 2




    @gerrit kindles can read kindle format, PDFs and .mobi. It is important to note that they can't read epub; but you can easily use an online converter to convert your epubs to mobis and still read them DRM free.
    – Daniel Vestøl
    Aug 28 at 14:24







1




1




While I do not believe Amazon manufactures waterproof Kindles there is a company that sells waterproofed Kindles. (Amazon's warranty is voided but they provide their own.)
– Loren Pechtel
Aug 27 at 20:14




While I do not believe Amazon manufactures waterproof Kindles there is a company that sells waterproofed Kindles. (Amazon's warranty is voided but they provide their own.)
– Loren Pechtel
Aug 27 at 20:14




3




3




Make sure you get the right sort of waterproof. Most devices described as "waterproof" would be more accurately called "spashproof": they're protected against incidental water contact. For outdoors use, you're probably looking for something rated IP67 (can survive falling into a stream) or IP68 (can survive falling into deeper bodies of water).
– Mark
Aug 27 at 20:29




Make sure you get the right sort of waterproof. Most devices described as "waterproof" would be more accurately called "spashproof": they're protected against incidental water contact. For outdoors use, you're probably looking for something rated IP67 (can survive falling into a stream) or IP68 (can survive falling into deeper bodies of water).
– Mark
Aug 27 at 20:29












@LorenPechtel Amazon's Kindle Oasis is waterproof (at least the 2nd gen is IPx8).
– muru
Aug 28 at 5:30




@LorenPechtel Amazon's Kindle Oasis is waterproof (at least the 2nd gen is IPx8).
– muru
Aug 28 at 5:30




1




1




@gerrit But Amazon devices can read non-drm books just fine, can't they? I understood the question to mean that they already own drm-free copies of the books.
– Nobody
Aug 28 at 12:08




@gerrit But Amazon devices can read non-drm books just fine, can't they? I understood the question to mean that they already own drm-free copies of the books.
– Nobody
Aug 28 at 12:08




2




2




@gerrit kindles can read kindle format, PDFs and .mobi. It is important to note that they can't read epub; but you can easily use an online converter to convert your epubs to mobis and still read them DRM free.
– Daniel Vestøl
Aug 28 at 14:24




@gerrit kindles can read kindle format, PDFs and .mobi. It is important to note that they can't read epub; but you can easily use an online converter to convert your epubs to mobis and still read them DRM free.
– Daniel Vestøl
Aug 28 at 14:24

















 

draft saved


draft discarded















































 


draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2foutdoors.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f20294%2fsafest-way-to-carry-ebooks-outdoors%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest













































































Comments

Popular posts from this blog

One-line joke

Is the Concept of Multiple Fantasy Races Scientifically Flawed? [closed]

What is the Windows Projected File System?