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mattdsteele

mattdsteele@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 1 month ago

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mattdsteele's books

Stuart J. Russell: Human compatible (2019, Viking)

"In the popular imagination, superhuman artificial intelligence is an approaching tidal wave that threatens not …

Listened to the audiobook

I feel like the author was on his back foot the whole time trying to justify why AI alignment is worth even considering as a problem. Which maybe makes sense, I didn’t find the actual argument (or suggested calls to action) especially compelling.

David Sedaris: Happy-Go-Lucky (Hardcover, 2022, Little Brown & Company)

Sedaris doesn’t have to be topical to be good

Always a fan of David Sedaris. He seems to have more of a mean streak in him this go round. And (for the audiobook at least) it’s a bummer that more of the stories weren’t performed in front of an audience due to the pandemic), but I’ll never not enjoy his writing.

Mark Dunn: Ella Minnow Pea

Best book recommendation from Tumblr by far

This was a fun little novel! It's set on an island founded by the inventor of the phrase "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog", which is embossed onto tiles in the town square.

As the glue starts to give out under the tiles, the town's council believe it to be a sign, and outlaw use of the letters that fall.

It's an epistolary book, so as more letters are outlawed, the author has to stop using them, down to only 5 by the end!

Brad Meltzer: The Escape Artist (Paperback, 2019, Grand Central Publishing)

"Who is Nola Brown? Nola is a mystery Nola is trouble. And Nola is supposed …

A perfect dad book

Listened to it all in one sitting, which is some indication it’s compelling. That said, I couldn’t get immersed in the characters. I’m hoping future books in the series do more with Nola in particular; way too much gruesome backstory that it feels the author lingered on a bit too much.

This was my first from the author, I’ll probably come back!

William MacAskill: What We Owe The Future (2022, Oneworld Publications)

What We Owe the Future is a 2022 book by the Scottish philosopher and ethicist …

EA 2.0, it’s (kind of) in the game

I liked a lot of the tenants of the early effective altruists; the data driven approach to doing the most good is naturally appealing. But if this is where it leads, I think I want to get off.

The author (compellingly) makes the case that the future has the potential to be vast, which essentially means that any quantitative approach, especially around extinction, is going to fall into the trap of the Tyranny of Survival. It reminds me a lot of my days in high school debate, where every round involved nuclear war scenarios, and “a millionth of infinity is still infinity”. I rejected the premise then, and I reject it now.

Kevin J. Anderson: Star Wars: Tales of the Bounty Hunters (Paperback, 1996, Bantam Books)

In a wild and battle-scarred galaxy, assassins, pirates, smugglers, and cutthroats of every description roam …

Expanded Universe for life!

(Putting this into a Review to see how it differs from a comment)

Finally finished this after a couple years of on-and-off reading while on vacation. Legends/EU Star Wars is a trip. The IG-88 story "Therefore I am" is legit. The others are a bit of a mixed bag.