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InfiniteSummaries

InfiniteSummaries@book.dansmonorage.blue

Joined 1 year, 11 months ago

I review summaries of books (most of them are from 12min.com). That's right. I'm too lazy to read the entire book. I just read the highlights and give you my opinion. These are mostly business or self-help books.

If a summary gets 5 stars, it is highly recommended. I plan to read the full book to squeeze every last bit of tasty juice from it. If a summary gets 4 stars, it is recommended. I might read the full book at some point. A 3-star book has some good stuff in it. Read the actual book if it appeals to you. 2-star books are duds. Skip them! The 1-star books are abominations. Avoid at all costs.

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As a man thinketh (2011, Tribeca Books) 3 stars

Allen's most famous book, today is considered a classic self-help book. Its underlying premise is …

Basic idea has merit

3 stars

[My review of the WikiSummaries and Four Minute Books summaries]

Oh, boy! I'm really working hard for you guys now! This is my first lazy-ass review where I'm summarizing TWO different summaries of the same book! Maybe this will give me a better sense of the book and whether it's worth our time to read whole the book. (Basically, any books that earn five stars are on my shortlist of books I want to read for real. Three- and four-star books are also worth reading or skimming, depending on your interest.)

As A Man Thinketh was published in 1903. It's less than 50 pages long, so it's a short read. Notice I didn't say "easy read". I skimmed some of the pages in the actual book. The writing style is outdated and a bit clumsy.

Apparently this book was one of the ancestors of that whole "The Secret" and "The …

Sell Like Crazy (Paperback, Sabri Suby) 4 stars

Solid, but nothing new

4 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

There's not a lot new in here, but the advice is solid. If you've read similar books, skip this one. Otherwise, this is as good of a marketing book as the others.

Suby claims his techniques work for any small business, whether you sell products or services.

Here is his whole plan:

PHASE NO. 1: Understand and identify your dream buyer

PHASE NO. 2: Create the perfect bait for your dream buyer 1. Create an attention-grabbing headline. 2. Make sure every point touches a burning issue. 3. Keep it simple.

PHASE NO. 3: Capture leads and get contact details 1. An opt-in headline. 2. A subheadline. 3. Ultra-compelling fascination bullets. 4. A compelling image. 5. A basic form.

PHASE NO. 4: The Godfather Strategy 1. Rationale. 2. Build value. 3. Pricing. 4. Payment options. 5. Premiums. 6. Power guarantee. 7. Scarcity.

PHASE NO. 5: …

Ten Arguments for Deleting Your Social Media Accounts Right Now (Paperback, 2019, Picador) 4 stars

Big Social is bad for you and society

4 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

[Note: Be sure to read the review of this book by ingrid@bookwyrm.social. She makes some excellent points. I probably missed those subtleties by only reading a summary.]

Good enumeration of the metastasizing cancer of social media. Most of this applies only to Big Social. Nevertheless, some of it also applies to the fediverse.

Lanier's ten arguments: 1. You are losing your free will 2. Quitting will help you resist the insanity of our times 3. You are turning into an asshole 4. Social media undermines truth 5. What you say becomes meaningless 6. You lose your capacity for empathy 7. You become unhappy 8. You lose your economic dignity 9. Social media destroys politics 10. Social media hates your soul

FINAL NOTES (quoted from 12min) Social media and the companies behind them… have capitalized on the concept of spying on and manipulating people. Social …

The millionaire fastlane (2011, Viperion Publishing Corporation) 3 stars

Good book, if you're 20

3 stars

The Millionaire Fastlane by MJ DeMarco

[My review of the 12min summary]

This is yet another how-to-get-rich book. It offers some practical advice. I mostly agree with his approach. Its primary audience is people in their 20s and 30s, because they can get the most benefit from it. His basic idea is that you start a business in your 20s or 30s, then you'll be successful enough that you won't have to work nearly as hard after that. I'm giving it three stars because it is less applicable to me, and there are a lot of books like this.

DeMarco says that there are three roads to wealth: the sidewalk, the slow lane, and the fast lane.

The sidewalk is people who spend money as fast as they make it. They never get anywhere in life.

The slow lane is people who squirrel money away in their 401k and defer …

Deep thinking (2017, PublicAffairs) 3 stars

Not as insightful as it could have been

3 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

This book is supposed to be about both chess and computer intelligence. Instead, it's mostly about chess. It gets into the computational aspects of chess toward the end of the book.

I knew a lot of this information already. If I hadn't, I probably would have rated it four stars. If both of these subjects interest you but you don't know much about them, you would probably like it more than I did.

Kasparov tells us about the history of chess, chess and madness, and the history of chess machines (starting in 1770). He then tells the story of the modern chess supercomputers and their competitions against the world chess masters, including his defeat by IBM's Deep Blue in 1997.

FINAL NOTES (quoted from 12min) "Intelligent, absorbing and provocative, 'Deep Thinking' by Garry Kasparov is simultaneously a firsthand account of a watershed moment in …

Freemium Economics (Paperback, Elsevier Science & Technology Books) 4 stars

A good book if you want to make a smartphone app

4 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

This book was better than I expected. A solid four stars for content. Its target audience is somewhat narrow. If you want to make a smartphone app, this is worth the read. Otherwise, skip it.

I expected that the author would extol the virtues of monetizing your users' private data, but he doesn't address that here. He does talk about how important analytics are, so you do have to collect ("anonymized") usage data. That's the data that tells how the app is used. Your goal is to maximize usage. If your app is useful, it will become popular, and you will have money.

The idea of the freemium business model is that you release an app with basic functionality. This has to be sufficiently useful that normal users can use those features alone. You also have a buttload of additional features that would be …

Financial Freedom (Hardcover, Avery) 4 stars

Seems to be solid advice

4 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

Ugh. Another book about money. I tire of these. They're usually written by somebody who was born with advantage, succeeds, and then thinks that the road to financial independence is simple.

I don't know what advantages Grant Sabatier has had in life. Maybe a lot. Maybe none. So, then, is his book usable by the rest of us? Overall, it seems to be.

He seems to be mostly realistic about how to better yourself financially. I'm not sure how easy it is to follow all the way up the ladder that he talks about in this book.

He says there are seven stages of financial freedom: 1 Clarity 2 Self-sufficiency 3 Breathing room 4 Stability 5 Flexibility 6 Financial independence 7 Abundant wealth

He has a nice test that you should apply to anything you want to buy:

Eleven ways to think about money …

Future Is Faster Than You Think (2020, Simon & Schuster) 4 stars

The Future Is Faster Than You Think, is a blueprint for how our world will …

The future is more optimistic than you think. Allegedly.

4 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

This is yet another book purporting to tell us what amazing things we'll see in the future. I'm leery of these. They're usually written by self-proclaimed "futurists" who ultimately get many things wrong. What they get right is usually obvious or, worse yet, has ramifications far different than what they predicted.

Case in point: As far back as the 1960s, futurists told us of the wonders of the information age ahead. All of the world's knowledge would be accessible from home! None predicted that the internet would bring us Twitter, Facebook, the rise of misinformation and conspiracy theories, and the undermining of democracy.

These authors fall into this camp of "the future is going to be amazing!" I'm giving it four stars, because they seem to have a good understanding of the current state of technology. Most of what they propose is a realistic …

Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It (Paperback, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform) 3 stars

Think yourself happy!

3 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

This is an overly simplistic prescription for overcoming depression.

Ravikant's whole premise is based on his unproven assertion that the reason you are depressed is because you don't love yourself! Shame on you!

There's no doubt that we all do things and even think things that are sometimes not in our best interest or sabotage our success. That's far from not loving ourselves.

Maybe Ravikant presents proof of his claim in the actual book and it's just not in the summary I read. Such is the hazard of reading summaries. However, you can still get a good feel for the merits of a book by reading a good summary. I could never read this many books otherwise. When I find a review that makes me think that the underlying book is excellent, then I will often seek out that book and read it. This …

Arguing with Zombies (Hardcover, W. W. Norton & Co) 5 stars

We finally have some BRAINS! in the debate

5 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

Paul Krugman is the Nobel Prize-winning economist, college professor, and New York Times columnist. This book is a collection of some of his published columns.

Krugman says that some of the Republican political views are zombies. They're ideas that have no evidence behind them. No matter how many times you try to kill them, they just keep shambling toward you.

The book talks about the lies about Social Security that the Republicans knowingly made in an effort to convince the public that Social Security was failing, so they could privatize it.

He also talks about economic inequality. Rather than confront the actual causes, Republicans blamed: • Highly educated workers • The decline of family values • Technological advancement In all three cases, Krugman shows why these are not true.

He also addresses climate change and the excuses the Republicans made for not addressing it. …

reviewed Essentialism by Greg McKeown

Essentialism (Hardcover, 2014, Crown Business) 4 stars

Essentialism isn't about getting more done in less time. It's about getting only the right …

Stop wasting time on the non-essential

5 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

According to McKeown, we're spending most of our lives going in too many directions. We're unfocused. We're trying to do it all and end up doing very little. We're "busy but not productive".

McKeown advocates that we determine the few things that really matter and focus on those. That is what Essentialism is. Essentialism has three core expressions that reflect the three core realities.

The three expressions: 1. I choose to 2. Only a few things really matter 3. I can do anything but not everything

The three realities: 1. Individual choice 2. The prevalence of noise 3. The reality of trade-offs

Since McKeown loves things that come in threes, he has three steps for becoming an Essentialist: 1. Explore: discern the trivial many from the vital few 2. Eliminate: cut out the trivial many 3. Execute: do the vital few things effortlessly

FINAL …

The Five Dysfunctions of a Team (Paperback, 2007, Pfeiffer) 2 stars

In The Five Dysfunctions of a Team Patrick Lencioni once again offers a leadership fable …

Impractical and unworkable

2 stars

[My review of the 12min summary]

There might be some good stuff in here. In principle, it sounds like it would work. The problem is that I have worked in many dysfunctional places. I can't imagine 99% of the managers there having even half of the skills or integrity to pull off what this book is advocating. Also, most employees have too much ego, insecurity, or incompetence to go along with this stuff.

My conclusion: Impractical and unworkable. A delusional fantasy.

For the record, these are the five dysfunctions. I can't say that I disagree with them: 1. Absence of trust 2. Fear of conflict 3. Lack of commitment 4. Avoidance of accountability 5. Inattention to results

FINAL NOTES (quoted from 12min) [I disagree with this] "One of the most influential business fables ever written, 'The Five Dysfunctions of a Team' is a succinct, simple, and smart book on teamwork …