You're really asking this? One server can serve millions of files in a day. How many store fronts would that require selling physical disks? And the environmental cost not just of transportation of the goods, but of people driving to and from stores? You've got to be kidding if you think serving the files digitally takes up one tenth of one percent of those resources.
You're really asking this? One server can serve millions of files in a day. How many store fronts would that require selling physical disks? And the environmental cost not just of transportation of the goods, but of people driving to and from stores? You've got to be kidding if you think serving the files digitally takes up one tenth of one percent of those resources.
Did your really mean to add that bit at the end?
There is a large environment cost in digital distribution, that is a fact, if you want to ignore it then that is your issue.
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You're really asking this? One server can serve millions of files in a day. How many store fronts would that require selling physical disks? And the environmental cost not just of transportation of the goods, but of people driving to and from stores? You've got to be kidding if you think serving the files digitally takes up one tenth of one percent of those resources.
Win.
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You're really asking this? One server can serve millions of files in a day. How many store fronts would that require selling physical disks? And the environmental cost not just of transportation of the goods, but of people driving to and from stores? You've got to be kidding if you think serving the files digitally takes up one tenth of one percent of those resources.
Did your really mean to add that bit at the end?
There is a large environment cost in digital distribution, that is a fact, if you want to ignore it then that is your issue.