bigblen started reading The Dark Side of the Sun by Terry Pratchett
EBook from Christchurch city library. Thanks @aimee@mastodon.nz for the recommendation
A guy who reads in Christchurch, New Zealand
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EBook from Christchurch city library. Thanks @aimee@mastodon.nz for the recommendation

Software projects keep failing, not because we don’t have the right team or tools but because our software development system …

In one of his finest achievements, Nobel Prize winner Saul Bellow presents a multifaceted portrait of a modern-day hero, a …

In one of his finest achievements, Nobel Prize winner Saul Bellow presents a multifaceted portrait of a modern-day hero, a …
Even with the opening "Lydia is dead", I wasn't prepared for the amount of heartbreak and tragedy that would unfold in this story.
Even with the opening "Lydia is dead", I wasn't prepared for the amount of heartbreak and tragedy that would unfold in this story.

"Lydia is dead. But they don't know this yet. So begins the story of this exquisite debut novel, about a …
A really compelling read. Most of the time, everything on the surface is nice, but there is a constant feeling of unease (given that we know right from the start that a house has been burnt down, and somebody is missing)
A really compelling read. Most of the time, everything on the surface is nice, but there is a constant feeling of unease (given that we know right from the start that a house has been burnt down, and somebody is missing)

When a custody battle divides her placid town, straitlaced family woman Elena Richardson finds herself pitted against her enigmatic tenant …
Very interesting read, I'm going to re-read a good portion immediately. (I have the book for 4 weeks from the public library).
I have a niggling discomfort about the fact that while the author is critical of the extractivisim inherent in current AI practices (and by extension cloud computing in general), she does work for Microsoft Research - one of the corporations that is part of the problem.
Very interesting read, I'm going to re-read a good portion immediately. (I have the book for 4 weeks from the public library).
I have a niggling discomfort about the fact that while the author is critical of the extractivisim inherent in current AI practices (and by extension cloud computing in general), she does work for Microsoft Research - one of the corporations that is part of the problem.