Reviews and Comments

Ori

zero6033@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 10 months ago

Trans non-binary UI/UX Engineer with ADHD. Advocate of secure and ethical tech. Writer of technical blogs and podcast host at CommitHub.

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Cliff Kuang, Robert Fabricant: User Friendly (Hardcover, 2019, MCD)

An inspiring read

This book started by showing examples of bad and good design on the past that changed the course of history. It clearly explained how the decisions lead to those results allowing me to clearly understand the situation. Design is nuanced and complicated since it's dealing with humans so having these examples instead of just this is what you do makes it very approachable. It made me realize how important design is to our world and how it can lead us to better services. One narrative that is unrelated to the book itself, but how the author wrote this book is that you can see the progression from on the past they were happy or at least okay with design principles that players like Apple brought, but when they started to talk about Disney, Carnival and Facebook they really started to shift the narrative of design. It was amusing to me …

Erik Brynjolfsson, Andrew McAfee, Jeff Cummings: The Second Machine Age (2015, Brilliance Audio)

A revolution is under way. In recent years, Google's autonomous cars have logged thousands of …

"AI won't kill us" the book

This book is ok but heavily optimistic about the future. They paint AI and future computing like it will evolve humans when we know that big tech just sees us as cattle. It is enjoyable at the very least.

Erik Brynjolfsson, Andrew McAfee, Jeff Cummings: The Second Machine Age (2015, Brilliance Audio)

A revolution is under way. In recent years, Google's autonomous cars have logged thousands of …

Review of 'The Second Machine Age' on 'GoodReads'

It is a good book but very hopeful on how our economy will an eventual automation of labor. They don't address the issue of wealth inequality well enough to give you a concrete overview on what may come. The book I based my observations on is rise of the robots by Martin Ford