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xylogx

xylogx@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 month, 1 week ago

An IT pro with 20 years of experience and Uni degrees in Math, Physics and CompSci. I love Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Non-Fiction tales of science, math, technology and history.

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Kai-Fu Lee, Chen Qiufan: AI 2041 (2021, Currency)

AI will be the defining development of the twenty-first century. Within two decades, aspects of …

Some Imaginitive Storytelling

Interesting mix of stories. The AI themes are a bit predictable and in the end not very imaginative, but the stories that are spun out of those themes are vivid and colorful. Felt a bit preachy, but an enjoyable ride in the end.

Russell Shorto, Russell Shorto: The Island at the Center of the World (Paperback, 2005, Vintage)

When the British wrested New Amsterdam from the Dutch in 1664, the truth about its …

Great Narrative Non-fiction With a Surprising Recasting of Historical Events

This book was great! A fresh, fascinating perspective on history told with an engaging narrative non-fiction style. Gripping and informative and makes you rethink how you view the world. The Dutch influence on the evolution of New York and consequently the United States and the rest of the world comes out in stark color as this tale unfolds. While the English tried to erase the Dutch contributions over the subsequent years of running the colony, the discovery of the corporate archives of the Dutch West India Company, the VOC, in the Netherlands has uncovered many events and stories which have not been told. The English aimed to take New Amsterdam whole in order to preserve the unique profit making machinery that resulted from the unique mix of culture, people and beliefs. They succeeded in this beyond any reasonable expectation and were able to transition the existing New Amsterdam in a …

Jack Black's story of his life as a professional thief.

Not quite a morality tale

A riveting telling of what is was like to live a life of crime in a bygone age. Filled with lots of colorful characters, the author goes to great lengths to illustrate the motivations and the driving forces that drove these desperate people to carry our desperate actions. Some risks are too great to take and some are too rewarding to pass up. Really fascinating character study and period piece.

Russell Shorto: Amsterdam (2013, Doubleday)

As the subtitle says, this is a history of the world's most liberal city. To …

Prequel to City at the Center of the World

This prequel to Taking Manhattan, fills in the backstory and the lore that surrounds Shorto’s previous master-work. Great characters and providing tons of informative backstory, this one somehow falls just a bit short of the last. In this story, the narrative thread is not quite as strong and the dramatic tension is lessened, partly due to the extended time periods covered in the book. Really liked this one, but a bit less than the last.

Tom Chivers: Everything Is Predictable (2024, Atria Books)

A captivating and user-friendly tour of Bayes’s theorem and its global impact on modern life …

A Book about Math, Statistics and How They Shape Our View of the World

A very quirky and interesting telling of how Bayesian statistics have shaped our world. There is a descent amount of math, but the author is self-conscious about the use of it and it did not doom this book, though I felt it could have been stronger with a bit less. He tries to be objective in comparing the Bayesian view to the frequentist view even though his bias is clear. He talks a lot about how statistics are used in science the consequences of this and I found that to the compelling. While I struggled a little bit with this one, its quirky nature and interesting prose kept my attention long enough for me to care about the content.

reviewed Picks and Shovels by Cory Doctorow (Martin Hench, #3)

Cory Doctorow: Picks and Shovels (Hardcover, 2025, Tor Books)

*New York Times bestselling author Cory Doctorow returns to the world of Red Team Blues …

Another Great Marty Hench Novel

Loved this book!!! Doctorow comes back strong in the latest installment of the Marty Hench series. This one is an origin story and it is great. Despite knowing how Marty turns out, the road is twisty and full of surprises. Filled with lots of stories of retro tech with fascinating detail, I devoured this book and hope to see more in this vein in the future.

David Bodanis: The Art of Fairness (Paperback, 2021, Little, Brown Book Group Limited)

From a New York Times bestselling author, a fresh and detail-rich argument that the best …

Great sentiment, flawed approach

An interesting analysis of historical events that show how a fair approach to managing people and distributing benefits can yield superior outcomes over income maximizing approaches. It suffers from being cherry picked and anecdotal . While the case studies are well researched and valid examples, without considering counter examples more broadly the arguments are less than convincing.

Great treatment on risk taking

Nate Silver shifts from prediction to betting and risk taking. I really liked this book, the anecdotal stories serve well to illustrate his broader points. The book is well structured and connects the dots between gambling as a hobby or a game and risk taking as an important part of every day life and society at large.

bookstodon #nonfictionnovember

reviewed Polostan by Neal Stephenson (Bomb Light, #1)

Neal Stephenson: Polostan (Hardcover, 2024, HarperCollins Publishers)

Bomb Light shines brightly - another great read from a great author

I loved this book. Once again Neal Stephenson has managed to combine an education on historical, scientific, technological and societal events with a gripping tale of intrigue and adventure. The story itself includes fascinating settings and characters from a little told tale of a forgotten time leading up to World War 2. Looking forward to the next chapter in the Bomb Light series.

Parmy Olson: Supremacy (2024, St. Martin's Press)

An even treatment of a much-hyped topic

This is a great telling of the race to create a general purpose artificial intelligence that sparked the ChatGPT LLM frenzy that is fueling a craze for AI. It is interesting how two companies both approached the challenge with a focus on AGI and safety and how they both ended up getting co-opted by the very tech giants they were seeking to shield the technology from. Well-told and well-researched, I really enjoyed reading this. The book does a good job at not taking sides as either a techno-optomist or and AI-doomer and presents both sides evenly. Well done!

Bookwyrm #bookstodon

Robin Wall Kimmerer: Braiding Sweetgrass (Paperback, 2015, Milkweed Editions)

Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants is a 2013 nonfiction …

A Powerful Journey

I love nature and I love books.If you do too, you might love this book. Told with a almost mystical reverence for the natural world, but with the voice of a scientifically trained botanist it weaves a story that while tragic at times is hopeful and uplifting. I feel like I struggled along with the author as she told her story and came out a better person in the end because of it. The audiobook is narrated by the author and that adds an extra dimension to the book and makes it more enjoyable, something rare for author narrated audiobooks.

Bookwyrm #bookstodon

Rudger Bregman, Elizabeth Manton, Erica Moore: Humankind (Paperback, 2021, Little, Brown and Company)

If there is one belief that has united the left and the right, psychologists and …

Better than Better Angels

Loved this book. I feel like this book did a better jobs than the more well-known Better Angels of Our Nature by Stephen Pinker at making the case that people are basically good. Pinker fell in the trap of trying to present specific evidence from research that was impefrect and most of the arguments against his thesis have been around that evidence and the validity of that research. Bregman does a good job of avoiding that trap without presenting unsupported arguments.Also, the way he structures the book helpds. Pinker was saying look at this macro evidence we are clearly good on average, whereas Bregman breaks down human behaviors in a micro way and shows the roots of these behaviors. It is a more satisfying approach and I feel more effective.