

Basically as a modern-day East India Trading Company. The book frames their actions around a discussion of empires, and she shows Sam Altman as someone who is driven by a desire to accumulate power for himself.
Basically as a modern-day East India Trading Company. The book frames their actions around a discussion of empires, and she shows Sam Altman as someone who is driven by a desire to accumulate power for himself.
I finished James by Percival Everett and I really enjoyed his sense of humor and use of irony, and I found it to be a fast-paced read.
Up next will be The First Three Minutes: A Modern View of the Origin of the Universe by Steven Weinberg, which was recommended by Neil DeGrasse Tyson on his StarTalk podcast.
I finished Empire of AI by Karen Hao. It was a really eye-opening (and very deeply researched) look at OpenAI, Sam Altman, and the entire AI industry and I was impressed by the fact that she interviewed AI workers in Kenya and Chile.
I’m currently reading James by Percival Everett and so far I like the author’s voice and sense of humor.
you keep responding but i’m taking it seriously😂😂
you mean like they ignored the part of me asking what a “star trek purist” is? maybe you can shed some light on that.
I love that your response to what a “star trek purist” is is a defense of bs opinions on the internet
wtf is a Star Trek “purist” and why should anyone care about your arbitrary opinion?
I have an old Bitbucket that still works, but I’ve migrated to Codeberg. I’m also running a self-hosted Forgejo for personal stuff.
still on Empire of AI by Karen Hao. these tech bros are insufferable🙄
I really liked Broken Earth too, and I have Becky Chambers on the TBR.
You could try sci-fi magazines or short-story collections (like The New Yorker’s Century Of Fiction which is over 1000 pages!) to find new authors you like and check out their work. Or you could double-down on Jemisin’s other books.
this will be my next fiction read, but I don’t know if I’ll enjoy it because I never read Huck Finn.
I finished two short novels and I did not like both: Everyday Is For The Thief by Teju Cole and You Dreamed Of Empires by Alvaro Enrigue.
So it’s back to non-fiction and my next book will be Empire of A.I. by Karen Hao.
finished Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams. currently reading Everyday Is For The Thief by Teju Cole.
The escalation of story/plot stakes from Three-Body to Dark Forest is huge, but if you don’t like the writing style or the author’s voice, it’s more of the same.
This is just a real performance for the author to write in 4 different style
My thoughts exactly! I’m happy you enjoyed it too😀
I just read the post-pregnancy, South Korea chapter, and wow! It’s stunning how openly soulless tech execs can be to even their own employees.
I finished Trust by Hernan Diaz, which I absolutely loved (the quickest I’ve ever read a novel according to my StoryGraph). Hernan Diaz might be my new favorite author, and I added his first novel, In The Distance, to my TBR.
I’m currently reading Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism by Sarah Wynn-Williams.
Trust by Hernan Diaz. I got it because I heard it has an interesting structure and it won the Pulitzer, and I’m really loving it so far. I just finished (after a little reading slump) Cyberlibertarianism: The Right-Wing Politics of Digital Technology by David Golumbia.
Developer Voices with Kris Jenkins. Great in-depth conversation with developers about a new and interesting project they’re working on.
I think I’ll add Never Known Men to my TBR, it sounds interesting.