Tiago's book is a nice manifesto about why you should take notes and organize them for yourself in the future, especially if you have no external process and structure. I especially appreciate Tiago's technology-independent library of tools and approaches to each element of his system. 3/5 Stars. The book is a good edition to your "self help" library if you read in the genre.
Tuesday, January 3, 2023
Eine unbeliebte Frau von Nele Neuhaus
Die Hauptfiguren sind sympathisch, das Ermittler-Duo +Team sind erfreulich normal und der Kriminalfall bleibt auch lange Zeit spannend. Leider war die Geschichte ein bisschen zu kompliziert. Das Buch ist jedoch sehr gut geschrieben und unterhaltsam. 4/5 Sterne.
Labels:
genfiction
Friday, December 16, 2022
Saturday, December 10, 2022
If you think you know what a proton is
Think again and read this interesting summary of recent research. In particular, try to explain how what we currently perceive as a "proton" can sometimes be detected as a quark soup consisting of two charm quarks that weigh 1.3 times as much as the entire proton. Forget conservation of mass. Einstein might label it "spukhafte Gewichtsveränderung."
Labels:
science
Wednesday, December 7, 2022
Monday, December 5, 2022
Columbus Day by Craig Alanson
This book has a fantastic space opera world built-up with a little awe-and-wonder mystery, wonderful politics, and great close-combat military action. The hilarious sarcastic super-AI is wonderful and the "patron race" hierarchy concepts from David Brin's (far better!) Uplift books are good. However, Alanson goes too far to explain too much, instead of enabling events to uncover the strict rules of the magic system and leaving lots of frustrating mystery to uncover. "Show the reader, don't tell the reader!" The gritty military experiences of "hurry up and wait," SNAFUs and ClusterFcks, are also wonderful and draw in the reader. I can't wait to continue reading the books. 4/5 Stars. Highly enjoyable!
Sunday, December 4, 2022
This is my funniest 2 ed by Mike Resnick
I found about a quarter of the stories to be funny or worthwhile, but the gems were worth the slog through the weaker stories. 3/5 Stars. In particular, the self-proclaimed "hay seed" farmer's diatribe describing a character
You look like somebody beat out a fire on your face with an ugly stick. You look like five miles 'a bad road. You look like the reason first cousins hadn't ought t'get married. Your liddle, squinchy eyes are all pupil; your nose is like a burnt pancake, and your jaws like a bear-trap.
. . . had me laughing out loud.
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