Sunday, April 25, 2021

Ghost Fleet by P W Singer & August Cole


I really enjoyed this one.  Well-scripted, lots of interesting "thriller" elements, gadgets, and a great war story.  5/5 Stars.

Friday, April 23, 2021

intelligence augmentation, intelligent infrastructure, & AI


Professor Jordan at Stanford wrote a really good description of how the terrible hype of "artificial intelligence" has prevented us from making important progress in engineering and more impactful computer science applications.  We all suffer from the systematic "bad statistics" anecdotes he describes, including our over-generalization from insufficient data.  The article is a little long and dated (2018) but highly recommended. 5/5 Stars
  

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Forgotten Starship, Book 1 Exodus by M. R. Forbes


Good mystery, plot, and characters but terrible science & plot details (military protocol). I am curious about the space aliens and may read the next one, 2/5 Stars.

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Rapid, Industrial Strength Spring Boot development & iteration


Richard Seroter (of MSDN fame) walks us through, step-by-step how to iterate on a containerized Java Spring Boot application using Google Cloud Run. Among the cool serendipitous side-effects he neglects to mention is cost savings.  Your application will autoscale up to whatever is needed in all resources;  More importantly your application will (very quickly) autoscale down to nearly nothing when resources are not needed.  This rapid development and iteration is a great example of realizing the promise of a public cloud and why on-premise systems are doomed.

The quest for better configuration languages


Configuration languages come into fashion and everyone embraces the language for everything, and then they disappear as the next concept gains traction.  XML was the answer; what was your question?  Does anyone remember tcl

The annual SPLASH conference is a gathering of people passionate about pursuing better ways of expressing our needs for configuration.  


Tuesday, April 20, 2021

Rebellion by Doc Spears, Jason Anspach, & Nick Cole


Slow, military fiction set in the Galaxy's Edge universe continues.  The "science" and magic system are quite bad so I shall probably not read the rest of the series. 2/5 Stars.

Monday, April 19, 2021

Anton loves SQLite and so should you

Anton Zhiyanov has written a delightful, open love letter about why SQLite is not a toy and you should use it more frequently in your production systems than you currently do.

Sunday, April 11, 2021

Dark Operator by Doc Spears et al



A little slower and less sweeping than the rest of the stories in these books, with more character development and personal introspection. 3 / 5  Stars.






Friday, April 9, 2021

Hustle Culture


A friend of mine pointed me at this interesting article about "Hustle Culture."  I, personally, suffer from this phenomenon.  I hope to take small steps towards the "Drawn" approach the author recommends.

You focus on the opportunity nested in a career obstacle instead of the difficulty. You center yourself with eight "C" words: calm, clarity, confidence, curiosity, compassion, creativity, connectedness, and courage. The drawn state fosters mindful productivity in which you make conscious choices. Your ability to accept obstacles, difficulty, and disappointments with calm and clarity gives you the ability to scale them. 


Wednesday, April 7, 2021

as simple as possible


Especially when I work on software architecture and software design, I frequently remind myself and others to keep things simple.  Einstein's Principle applies in many areas, not just science.  Today in Nature, two teams of neuroscientists published two interesting measurements with ideas about why people systematically overlook subtractive changes and a social psych experiment demonstrating that adding is favored over subtractingHere is a fun video one of the authors made.

Leonardo Davinci: "Perfection is when there is nothing left to take away."
Lao Zu: "Knowledge is gained by adding concepts; wisdom is gained by subtracting."
Einstein: A science theory should be as simple as possible but no simpler.



 

Sunday, April 4, 2021

Eines Menschen Flügel von Andreas Eschbach


1.300 Seiten und vier Generationen gentechnisch veränderter Menschen, die dem Leser egal sind. Der Autor versucht, das Wirtschafts- und Rechtssystem einer kleinen, geschlossenen, utopischen Gesellschaft zu beschreiben. Die Wissenschaft ist jedoch ziemlich schrecklich. Die Psychologie und Soziologie sind schlimmer und die Geschichte ist langweilig. 1/5 Sterne. Es tut mir leid, dass ich das ganze Buch durchgemacht habe.