Sunday, August 23, 2020

Gate Crashers by Patrick S Tomlinson


Fun, light, hilarious story had me laughing out loud several times. 5/5 Stars.  The silly cardboard characters embrace their own tropiness.

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Siddhartha Eine indische Dichtung von Hermann Hesse


Ich habe diese Geschichte genossen. Die Charaktere sind alle bunt und der Dialog ist wunderschön gestaltet. Der Buddhismus wird ohne Proselytisierung dargestellt. 4/5 Sterne

Saturday, August 15, 2020

The dead mountaineer's inn by Borris & Arkady Strugatsky


I enjoyed this book much more than the roadside picnic. 4/5 Stars.

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Gods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-Garcia


I enjoyed this one.  The Mayan human sacrifice and death myths were well-crafted into a consistent magic system with great characters and a fun story. 3/5 Stars

Sunday, August 9, 2020

Some Assembly Required - Decoding four billion years of life from ancient fossils to DNA by Neil Shubin


Taking a break from "lit rut shore" that I do not appreciate, I picked up another popular biology book from my queue and enjoyed this fun ride through recent, counter-intuitive findings in our current understanding of the origins and evolution in biology. 4/5 Stars.

Friday, August 7, 2020

The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro


I stopped reading because the main character and "dignity" concept were so abhorrent.  Quiet desperation, indeed. Yuck, 1/5 Stars.    Ishiguro gets one last chance with Never Let me go and then I give up.

Thursday, August 6, 2020

Serverless is not optimal for every problem


Over at Ingenious, Gabe Chertok makes some great arguments about why the inevitable NoOps Serverless future is still not yet ready for many applications and has some more maturing to do.  Among his strong reasons is inconsistency among components.  Read the whole thing.

Unfinished Code Delivery



Gandalf published another fun IISM.org article about what I call below-minimum viable software that we ship because of date pressure.  Gandalf calls it unfinished code. Enjoy.

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

A memory called Empire by Arkady Martine


Odd politics, good story and terrible science 1/5 Stars.  I nearly stopped reading it three times.

Otherness by David Brin


I had previously read all of the stories from their earlier collections but I had not read all of the essays and I enjoyed re-reading some of the stories for the timeliness of their concepts in the current times where shadows are cast on our societal progress towards enlightenment.  4/5 Stars.  David is always fun to read but the depth and implications cause the reading to be slow.