Given how cheap the printed versions are, I don't get the idea of downloading books like "where there is no doctor". If you're gonna print it out you'll spend more time, ink , and paper than a printed version and all you'll have is a bunch of oversized paper that still needs to be bound or put into a protective cover. If you leave it as a digital file, your medical references are now dependent on you having a working, powered computer available when you need it the most.
Somebody please explain the rationale to me. I can see having a version on a thumb drive but I sure wouldn't want that to be my only copy.
Nothing personal Ratbert, I'm just curious.
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JohnE
"and all the lousy little poets
comin round
tryin' to sound like Charlie Manson"
The Future/Leonard Cohen