t(h)inkerer wants to read Scarcity by Sendhil Mullainathan
Daniel Pink calls this one of the most underrated books of the last 10 years. That it changed his thinking about thinking. twitter.com/DanielPink/status/1521203124241039360
I like learning (reading, thinking, writing), and I dabble in anything that interests me, both fiction and non-fiction.
I need to make more time to read, because my "To Read" list keeps getting longer
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Daniel Pink calls this one of the most underrated books of the last 10 years. That it changed his thinking about thinking. twitter.com/DanielPink/status/1521203124241039360
This is a great resource for working with legacy systems. Actually, it is mostly about working with people, which is appropriate. Creating and using software is often about working with people and reifying workflow processes in software.
I had it recommended to me as a good book for non-legacy systems as well. There are some good points about when to modernize a system and avoiding chasing shiny new technology.
I didn't find it helpful to a software engineer such as myself, but I could see the value in a manager reading it, which is appropriate as Marianne is coming from an engineering management perspective.
I was expecting something more like modern self-help books, lots of practical tips on how to work with your mind. There was some of that, but a lot of it was sermons inspiring courage and highlighting the importance and dignity of intellectual work. This is not a bad thing.
I tended to skim through a lot, because it was stories and illustrations. I feel like I probably missed some tidbits that were buried among them, and I'd like to go back and read it more carefully now that I know what to expect and when I'm in the right frame of mind, but I don't know if I will ever end up reading it again, at least not for a while.
It definitely comes from a Christian (really Catholic) perspective, which was not a problem for me. In fact, I loved that, but it may not resonate if you're not …
I was expecting something more like modern self-help books, lots of practical tips on how to work with your mind. There was some of that, but a lot of it was sermons inspiring courage and highlighting the importance and dignity of intellectual work. This is not a bad thing.
I tended to skim through a lot, because it was stories and illustrations. I feel like I probably missed some tidbits that were buried among them, and I'd like to go back and read it more carefully now that I know what to expect and when I'm in the right frame of mind, but I don't know if I will ever end up reading it again, at least not for a while.
It definitely comes from a Christian (really Catholic) perspective, which was not a problem for me. In fact, I loved that, but it may not resonate if you're not Christian.
Looks interesting. I love a good time paradox scifi novel, and this looks different. www.npr.org/2022/02/23/1082397878/the-paradox-hotel-is-a-mashup-of-sci-fi-and-crime-fiction
"This short-story collection by Ellison was a revelation when I first read it and the titular story is a top-5 AI story IMO."
Recommended here: twitter.com/JWB1824/status/1479535142079279106
Recommended here: twitter.com/ldesegur/status/1479304094523162626
Recommended here: twitter.com/anduser96/status/1479368610028081156 (I think; there are other books named Shogun)
Recommended here: twitter.com/anduser96/status/1479368610028081156 (maybe?)
Probably it is referring to James Clavell's Shogun, but this looks interesting, too.
Recommended here: twitter.com/ctrahey/status/1479303526991888384
Recommended here: twitter.com/ctrahey/status/1479303526991888384
Not sure it's my kind of spirituality, but it could be a valuable perspective to hear. It also looks like a short read.
Recommended here: twitter.com/ctrahey/status/1479303526991888384
Is this on the same topic as Data and Reality?