That's what I meant in mine- it does work. And you can use your own folder structure and just point calibre to it instead of creating a library.I just use windows normal folder structure, and have all my stuff on a spare drive.
That said, for ebooks, I use calibre (free calibre - E-book management), which would probably work for gaming PDFs too.
Mostly. The image is scrapped from the pdf, where I have a pdf. The description is pulled from pdf too, where it can. Rest is manualThat looks pretty cool! I started to write my own, but I quickly realised I didn't care that much. You stuck with it though! All of the information is added manually?
Wow. Yeah, Google’s general Terms allow them to remove or delete content that infringes copyrights or violates other policies, and they can also suspend or terminate the account if you “materially or repeatedly breach these terms”. But I'm sure with the free accounts this is automated and that there is little recourse with an overly aggressive algorithm. It definitely makes sense to have offline, local backups of your files.To my knowledge, he was sharing a directory with us, his group, for a PBEM. In one of the GM folders, he had a copyrighted file. Not public, just accidentally in a sub-folder that was included in the hierarchy. Gone with no recourse. The worst part was, it synced to his home computer and deleted all of his files on his home computer before he caught it. That's the unforgiveable part to me.
I love my Synology NAS, but have found that just using Syncovery is a better option. It's much more fully-featured than anything in the NAS OS, and I can use it for several different purposes (I have several different backup jobs going to several different locations that run under different schedules). I don't even just use one cloud service - I use AWS S3 storage for a cold-storage area where I store things that I don't want to waste my normal cloud space on, using Syncovery to take it from my onedrive to the S3 cold-storage as things age out of me touching them.I've been thinking of getting a Synology NAS for some time, which has the ability to link to and backup Google Drive accounts. I wouldn't be getting it just for that, but it would simplify offline backups.
Do you put everything there? That's where I have my untouched stuff, but I don't put things I actually access there.Another CRON on that Raspberry Pi runs rclone to copy data to an Amazon S3 Glacier Deep Archive.