Non-fiction
Non-fiction includes books that are not in
a specific technical field in which I am interested.
- Godel, Escher, Bach : An Eternal Golden Braid,
by Douglas R. Hofstadter
- Still working on this one...
- The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language, by Steven Pinker
- Superb! 10 out of 10.
-
Show-Stopper!
: The Breakneck Race to Create Windows NT and the Next Generation at Microsoft,
G. Pascal Zachary
- This book sounds and looks more interesting than it is. It
contains some useful information into why and how NT was developed,
but overall the treatment is very shallow, and the book as a whole is
rather frustrating in that respect. I'm giving this book a low score
partly because, despite the fact that the author had good access to
all of the key players, he was still unable to produce an absorbing
and exciting story out of such great raw material. His analogies
explaining the roles of the OS and application were unbelievably lame,
and I can't believe that any non-technical person would find them
illuminating in the slightest. Zachary's habit of using the same style
to introduce each new "character" (and, often, dropping them two pages
later) became particularly tiresome.
(Since writing the above, I found this review,
which says that "the correct author for the job was lacking." 'Nuff
said.)
JohnR, Dec 29th, 1997. 4 out of 10.
-
Architects
of the Web : 1,000 Days That Built the Future of Business, Robert
H. Reid.
-
Structured as a series of chapters on particular people instrumental in
leading Internet technologies and sites, this book is an entertaining tour
through the meteoric rise of the Web. Reid does a great job of telling
the story of the people behind the technology (and the hype!). It's technically
on the light side, and, as one of the reader reviews on amazon.com pointed
out, not about the architects of the Web at all, really. Also, it's
already a little out of date (completed in December 96). By the end I found
myself slogging through the last couple of chapers, but overall I really
enjoyed reading this book and catching up with everything that's been happening
(just where was I when all these people were busy being meteoric...?)
I found a number of chapters particularly instructive, such as the
one about advertising revenue -- I finally understand something about
where the money comes from. If you've been around for a while and find
banners just plain irritating, it's interesting to find out that this
is -- more-or-less -- what is driving the whole thing financially, at
least for the moment.
JohnR, Dec 18, 1997. 8 out of 10.
-
The
Gutenberg Elegies : The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age, Sven
Birkerts.
-
Not much to review here. I bought this book when I was somewhat disillusioned
(to say the least) with computers in general and computer programming in
particular. I thought the book might help me understand this, but, in the
middle of a rather long and rambling chapter about Birkert's passionate
years as a would-be novelist and subsequent failure as such, I got very
bored with him and put the book down. If Birkerts had bothered to stay
on the subject and not been so pathetically self-indulgent, I might have
something more to say about the rest of this book.
These days, I think that arguments about how new technology damages (Birkerts
goes further -- the new technology is the "devil"!) the supposedly-ages-old
habit of reading pretty much miss the point. We have a new medium, and
we use it how we choose to use it. Those who explore the medium influence
what it becomes for us, and those (like Birkerts) who sit back and lament
the supposed end of a beloved pastime and profession are blinkered and
not a little arrogant.
JohnR, Dec 1997.