generated by OpenAI ChatGPT, data fetched from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_FIFA_World_Cup_squads
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import csv
# Define the URL of the Wikipedia pagegenerated by OpenAI ChatGPT, data fetched from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_FIFA_World_Cup_squads
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import csv
# Define the URL of the Wikipedia pageI've been using [Backblaze][bbz] for a while now as my online backup service. I have used a few others in the past. None were particularly satisfactory until Backblaze came along.
It was - still is - keenly priced at a flat $5 (£4) per month for unlimited backup (I've currently got just under half a terabyte backed-up). It has a fast, reliable client. The company itself is [transparent about their operations][trans] and [generous with their knowledge sharing][blog]. To me, this says they understand their customers well. I've never had reliability problems and everything about the outfit exudes a sense of simple, quick, solid quality. The service has even saved the day on a couple of occasions where I've lost files.
Safe to say, I'm a happy customer. If you're not already using Backblaze, [I highly recommend you do][recommend].
As a developer, it bothers me when someone sends me a large pdf file compared to the number of pages. Recently, I recieved a 12MB scanned document for just one letter-sized page... so I got to googlin, like I usually do, and found ghostscript!
to learn more abot ghostscript (gs): https://www.ghostscript.com/
What we are interested in, is the gs command line tool, which provides many options for manipulating PDF, but we are interested in compressign those large PDF's into small yet legible documents.
credit goes to this answer on askubuntu forum: https://askubuntu.com/questions/3382/reduce-filesize-of-a-scanned-pdf/3387#3387?newreg=bceddef8bc334e5b88bbfd17a6e7c4f9