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    Iron Heart Fall/Winter 2025 Collection Preview - Now Live

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    • tatmantallT
      tatmantall
      Joined:

      Very interesting stuff, I'm getting schooled in this thread

      "I know to you it may sound strange, but I wish it would rain…"- The Temptations

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      • S
        Snowy
        Joined:

        Stephenson's books are hard for me to properly describe. Picking up many authors, including Gibson (and I LOVE HIS BOOKS/ideas/concepts), the books are just books, read in a weekend or a few weeks. Stephenson's they're so different and difficult to relate to from the offset sometimes that you really have to suspend some disbelief and become part of the book. At that point the colour of the world opens up, and the themes, "such as mathematics, cryptography, philosophy, currency, and the history of science" - wikipedia take on a new light. I learn enjoyable about our world through his books. Anathem is probably one of the most difficult fiction books I've ever read, but I still recall how I felt when I finished it, now 5 years later.

        Stephenson's a bad ass in general as well. His love of sword fighting lead to him trying (it's still in progress) to make an entirely new way of making sword fighting games. The video is pretty fun over @ http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/260688528/clang?ref=live.

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        • mclaincauseyM
          mclaincausey
          見習いボス
          Joined:

          And he has a playing card crypto system designed by another hero, Bruce Schneier, and implemented in Perl by himself in the book. Awesome.

          Think it, be it.

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          • S
            Snowy
            Joined:

            I loved reading that. The syntax used throughout the book was legit, which had me gooey to begin with, to get to the end and have a full walk through of the encryption schema by Bruce himself. Whilst it lost me as I was trying to mentally track, it was really really cool!

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            • S
              Snowy
              Joined:

              Whilst I was shopping tonight it hit me that I'd not mentioned The Mars trilogy. Red Mars, Blue Mars, Green Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson. A really nice series that works through tera-forming of our closest planet and what it could look like and again, societal implications of a many-worlds society.

              Ender's Game is a fun read, which I also forgot, on the space tip.

              MCL, You'd appreciate the Ware Tetralogy by Rudy Rucker. One of the most mind blowing series/books I've read. Gibson did the intro (which is how I found it). May have recco'd the book in here before. I found out a few months ago I sometimes hung out with the guy's son whilst I was living in San Francisco, too smaller world sometimes :).

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              • mclaincauseyM
                mclaincausey
                見習いボス
                Joined:

                Been meaning to read Rucker. I think he's a computer scientist iirc

                I read a book that was a little pulpy in the genre and kind of ripping off Gibson's style: Running Black, P Todoroff.

                Another geek book, though more realistic and less cyberpunk, is Sysinternals' Mark Russinovich's Zero Day. Cyberterrorism. Nice read.

                Finally, Counting from Zero, by an Aussie writer, was another entertaining geek read.

                Think it, be it.

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                • S
                  Snowy
                  Joined:

                  Rucker was/is, correct. His son run's the largest Wireless ISP in the bay area called Money Brains.

                  Thanks for Zero Day, it's on the list 🙂

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                  • xtcclassicX
                    xtcclassic
                    啓蒙家
                    Joined:

                    I just finished reading the Mistborn trilogy from Brandon Sanderson, which I enjoyed. I've also recently read some others mentioned in this thread like the two Patrick Rothfuss books (DYING for the third book to come out, although if it takes much longer I'm going to have to re-read the first two), Anathem by Neal Stevenson, and The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman. All good books. I just started Imajica again, it's been years since I read that one. I'm a big fan of King's Dark Tower series as well. I guess I'm a big nerd-fiction fan (I hadn't heard that term before), so if anyone has any more recommendations…

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                    • S
                      Snowy
                      Joined:

                      xtc, I know what you me RE Rothfuss, I feel like I'll have to read them both again anyhow. I'd not read The Ocean at the End by Gaiman, another one for the list.

                      I'm currently reading Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson, enjoying it.

                      Charles Stross Accelerando is a really amazing look at what a future world would look like. Ties into themes nicely discussed in Diamond Age. I will like re-read Accelerando after this just to re-sync the ideas.

                      Stross in general is a bit of a younger read (The Laundry Files esp), but Accelerando's idea make it a mind bender. His normal books mix tech, with math, higher/lower planes of existence, and 'spooks'.

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                      • GilesG
                        Giles
                        IHUK Crew
                        Joined:

                        I'm reading Catastrophe by Max Hastings

                        http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/historybookreviews/10382547/Catastrophe-by-Max-Hastings-review.html

                        An essential read if you want to see how a bunch of fecking tossers can ruin a few countries and millions of lives in acts of monumental stupidity, arrogance and hubris…....

                        "OK face up to it - you're useless but generally pretty honest and straightforward . . . it's a rare combination of qualities that I have come to admire in you" - Geo 2011

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                        • mclaincauseyM
                          mclaincausey
                          見習いボス
                          Joined:

                          I like how Stross called for death to Microsoft Word recently…

                          Think it, be it.

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                          • mclaincauseyM
                            mclaincausey
                            見習いボス
                            Joined:

                            Man, that review of Catastrophe is so well-written in such quintessential British style.

                            Think it, be it.

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                            • xtcclassicX
                              xtcclassic
                              啓蒙家
                              Joined:

                              Hahaha!!!!

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                              • D
                                dronemod
                                Joined:

                                Phew, haven't had any time to read novels or short stories. Too much reading for studies, maybe I should take a break and read something non-scientific.

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                                • xtcclassicX
                                  xtcclassic
                                  啓蒙家
                                  Joined:

                                  In the spirit of Halloween–- I highly recommend House of Leaves.

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                                  • Morose_PenguinM
                                    Morose_Penguin
                                    Raw and Unwashed
                                    Joined:

                                    Sir Terry Pratchett's 40th Discworld book published today… Bought one from Waterstones as they usually have exclusive content. Different cover and a bookmark... oh well, at least I've got a copy. Looked in smiths on the off chance that they'd be cheaper... Yep £6.00 cheaper and with an additional short story... So now I have two, one of which will be a birthday or hogswatch present for a member of my family...

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                                    • mclaincauseyM
                                      mclaincausey
                                      見習いボス
                                      Joined:

                                      Love Pratchett!

                                      Think it, be it.

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                                      • S
                                        Snowy
                                        Joined:

                                        ^Ditto!

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                                        • trail and arrowT
                                          trail and arrow
                                          Joined:

                                          @Snowy:

                                          ^Ditto!

                                          +1

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                                          • seawolfS
                                            seawolf
                                            Mod Squad
                                            Joined:

                                            I'm reading "S" By JJ Abrams and Doug Dorst. It's the most unique reading experience I've ever had. Take a look! http://www.fastcocreate.com/3021011/inside-jj-abrams-brain-bending-book-within-a-book

                                            “Good design is actually a lot harder to notice than poor design, in part because good designs fit our needs so well that the design is invisible” - Don Norman

                                            @zeebeeleather

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