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Radical Abundance by K. Eric Drexler

A friend of mine just asked me if I finally read Drexler’s “Radical Abundance“, which reminded me that I didn’t write anything about it… or anything else I’ve been reading recently. =P Yes, I read it, and I re-read it, and finished doing so a while back. And I’m a big fan!

K. Eric Drexler, who is for all intents and purposes the father of nanotechnology, is probably the most qualified person to explain what we’ve already accomplished in the field, what’s to be expected, the obstacles, the misunderstandings, and why we’re not where we could be yet. In this book he also does an amazing job in describing in a very straightforward and “none-fiction” way, what the future could look like if we did in fact realize the potentials of the field.

I’ll probably read this again soon enough… huuuuuuge fan!

Radical Abundance

So, well, yes, I did finish reading The Hunger Games trilogy. My thanks to you who forced me into it. 😉 I don’t however have much to say about it. Not for the lack of thoughts, mind you. But simply because I don’t know what to say… I don’t know how to put it into words… I guess for me it got a tad too emotional.

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As usual, the movies are good but they do not at all reach up to the books. The books tell a story that can very well happen tomorrow, in detail they depict a world that so resembles our current one. That’s why it was very emotional for me to read them, because there are too many familiar elements, too much connection to reality. Thanks to all I’ve seen, I had far too many “oh, I know exactly how that is” moments reading the 3 books.

All I can say is that I hope we somehow manage to skip that. I don’t know how likely it is though, as my own experiences living in various parts of the world have shown me too much to leave me with much optimism regarding the direction our race is currently headed to.

And you know what? The ending always looks like that….

In September 2006, SONY released their very first line of ebook readers, PRS-500. By October 2006, I had already got my hands on one, despite the fact that the product was at the time only available in USA [and I was living in Canada]. A few months earlier I had already come across the leaked specs for the device, and I knew I was looking at the realized version of something the need for which had been running around in my head pretty much since I started reading.

Hand held devices and tablet computers on which I could read eBooks weren’t anything new, but this was something entirely different. Aside from the nice proper size, ease of use, and well, being able to carry around a whole library in my back pocket, on this device I could read for hours without tiring my eyes due to the E-Ink tech. Having come to the conclusion that in a life like mine I simply couldn’t buy and carry around paperbacks, I moved to the ebook side long before that. But this was the first time I was well and truly freed of paper.

I can’t begin to describe how much I enjoyed my first reader, and since then I have kept a very close eye on the development of ebook readers from different brand. I guess that part is obvious, given the number of posts on this blog on the topic. Another thing that’s obvious from the posts on this blog, is that I’ve not up to this day found a reader that I’ve liked more than the Sony Reader line. [And yes well… for a time I was involved with the development… ]

I imagine by now I’ve made it pretty clear about the kind of dislike I have for Amazon Kindle, and the reasons. And I don’t have much positive things to say [comparatively] about the other popular products out there either. But then it’s not as if I’ve always liked how the Sony Reader has turned out.

Since PRS-500, I’ve basically tried every single Reader model that Sony has released [yes and I still have all of them =D], and not all of them have been so great. I loved PRS-500 since it was my first one. =) PRS-505 was very functional and very cool. PRS-700 was pretty much the love of my life. It was just beautiful, very smooth in every way, amazing performance, and it had back light. And then came PRS-T3. And every model that I haven’t mentioned, it’s because in some way or the other I didn’t really like it.

But oh my world, PRS-T3! This is quite easily the best Sony Reader up to now, and in my opinion very much the best ebook reader currently available. And well, remember how I recently mentioned something about amazing Sony products somehow being constantly dissed by online reviews? That applies to this product too. I can’t for the life of me figure out how it is that readers with terrible hardware, glitchie software and all sorts of limitations  are gaining name, while the Sony reader isn’t even on the charts!! [Probably a question for marketing people.] I can’t quite understand exactly how Kindle still exists, how it’s still being produced and bought, when a piece of art like PRS-T3 exists.

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The device, which runs a mini version of Android OS, simply functions very very smoothly. It supports a wide range of ebook and image formats, including ones that Kindle and the rest of them don’t support, and you have no limitations as to where you get the books from. The note taking functionality works very well both with finger and a stylus. It’s naturally WiFi connected and there are no browsing limitations [you can go wherever you like via the browser]. The device has an optional “light cover”, where a very nicely designed reading light extends from the back of the cover. [And unlike the previous version, it doesn’t require a separate battery. It uses a negligible amount of the reader’s own charge.]

But I guess the most important feature of all is nothing new, the E-Ink is still there, and smoother than ever. The device’s display is brilliant, and you can stare at it for hours without any pressure on your eyes, or at least no more than staring at paper [hint hint to Kindle Fire users].

Oh, and to explain the part about “stolen and repurchased”. Well, originally I bought the T3 about 4 months ago. But less than a month after that I was robbed in the train, and the reader was stolen from me. So I had to repurchase it… well it was rather annoying seeing that for various reasons I purchased this one from Canada and I had to have my mom buy it again over there and send it to me… But yes, the new one’s been here a few weeks now and all is back to normal.

My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk

A few weeks ago I finished reading Orhan Pamuk’s historical murder mystery book, “My Name is Red“. Honestly I had never even heard of the apparently very popular book or the Nobel laureate author until I saw the book in the hands of an acquaintance, and well, the cover of all things took my attention. =P

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The book goes deep into the culture and mentality of the society of miniaturists in the Ottoman empire, and through that, reveals many interesting facts about the general life style, religious views and beliefs in different classes of the society. But I guess what really got me reading, was that the book talks more about Persia even that it does about Turkey! Seeing that the Persian miniaturists and calligraphists of the time were considered pretty much deities of the field, there’s a great deal of discussion and historical facts regarding Persia.

The books touches upon topics that I in the past couple of years I haven’t read much about, and it gave me a rather nostalgic feeling. It also brought a few historical facts to my attention that I actually did not know about, despite the fact that I myself practice the Persian calligraphy and have done my fair share of reading on the topic.

And well, the story was also pretty good. =) So yes, recommended reading.

“Homeland” by Cory Doctorow

After reading Cory Doctorow’s “Little Brother” last month, I decided to read the sequel named “Homeland“. It turned out to be a good idea.

For the first 3/4th of the book, what I would say is pretty much the same thing I said Doctorows_Homeland[1] about the first book. In terms of the style, the sequel is even more sloppily written than the first book, if that’s possible. I would have been very happy reading far less about the burning man and other horribly stretched topics throughout the book. But the good ideas are still there.

But I feel that during the last 1/4th of the book, there’s a slight shift in the mood and the direction. It feels like the ideas are finally properly cooked! The characters actions become more realistic, actually everything becomes a lot more realistic. The points are clearly made and the conclusion has a nice balance to it.

All in all, I think that I like “Homeland” better than “Little Brother”!

A few days ago I finished re-reading Margaret Cheney’s “Tesla: Man Out of Time“. As if I hadn’t experienced enough grief reading it the first time, I had to go and do it Tesla_Man_Out_of_Time[1] again. Well what can I say, the book really is worth reading over and over and over again.

I’ve done my fair share of Tesla reading, biographies and research and everything I’ve been able to get my hands on. And I can say, this is definitely the best written, most informative, most comprehensive biography of him I’ve ever come across. Where other books have a general tendency of focusing mostly on certain periods or aspects of Tesla’s life, this book does a fine job bringing the pieces of the puzzle together. The book paints a much more realistic picture of Tesla’s life, who he was, and what he was like in his personal life.

This of course means that when you read about all that this world did to him, you’re going to experience an especially sharp pain in the soul.

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  • Filed under: Books, Reading, Tesla
  • “Little Brother” by Cory Doctorow

    Last Sunday at “The Uncanny Book-Club” gathering, I listened to some interesting discussions regarding Cory Doctorow’s “Little Brother“, which made me curious enoughurl[1] to want to read the book. I loaded up the book to my Reader and was planning on having a go at it in our next reading group this coming Sunday, but I’m afraid it didn’t last that long… It’s already been “had”. I munched through most of it during my commute from Zurich to Basel and back, for recent coder event at the Magnolia office.

    As usual I’m not going to give much of the book away here, but since a couple of friends are wondering if they should read the book… Here’s the super-short version of what I think.

    It’s worth reading. =)

    Ok well… I’m not a fan of the writing style. The author doesn’t seem to have much of that at all. This is something that I’m generally not all that sensitive about as I’m looking for the message, but it does matter. In this case the author didn’t manage to get to me with his words, and I felt that in the literary sense the book was rather sloppily written. A young adult novel does not necessarily have to carry that load of cheese, and I would certainly have been happy reading far less about LARPing.

    That being said, there’s some good [and sometimes great] ideas in there. There is a message, even if it’s being delivered in not the most powerful of ways. For me personally the message hits pretty close to home, given my own past experiences. These are ideas that should be spread, taught and pondered, regardless of the author’s literary capabilities, regardless of the medium. The most important aspect of the book, to me, is the fact that it’s advertising the culture of thinking, which is rare enough nowadays [comparatively speaking].

    Dripping cheese aside, I find the character development in the book rather well done. Especially in regards to Marcus, the main character, himself. The way he had to grew up… some of what he felt… well connected to reality. Although the reality version would be far more complex, but still, I feel that the author is doing a good job showing the kind of growing up one ends up having to do under such circumstances. It’s also nicely realistic, that he’s quite the non-hero. It’s not him taking care of it all and saving the day, he doesn’t even want to be the leader, but due to his way of thinking and acting he ends up on the front row anyway. That’s precisely how it usually happens, in reality, outside of Hollywood movies. 

    I also find the ending quite appropriate, seeing that it’s actually not much of an ending. What you see at the end feels to me like the eye of the storm, and a good place to end the story, especially since there seems to be a sequel. It appears that the story’s main characters, while having a nice “day” at the time, are preparing to get into another, possibly much larger, round of conflict.

    Anyway, wrote too much already… check it out for yourselves. 😉 I think I’m going to read “Homeland”, the sequel, next.

    Last week I finished reading Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s “Fooled By Randomness“. What I would say about it is pretty much the same as what I wrote about “The Black Swan“. This is something to read for anyone who wants to know how the world works, and why we generally don’t/can’t do a good job in predicting what will or will not come next.

    Though I think I’m still a bigger fan of “The Black Swan”, I really enjoyed reading this one too.

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    Roadside Picnic

    Last week I finished reading “Roadside Picnic“, the 1972 sci-fi novel by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky [as per suggestion of a friend]. For me, the book “felt” quite a bit  similar to  Huxley’s “Brave New World”. Dystopian society built around one major life changing element which is a source of unnatural luck for some and unfair disadvantage for many others.

    I did enjoy reading the book, I really liked the central idea. But I must also say that this is generally not my cup of sci-fi. I am much more into Asimov’s style of sci-fi. When I read a science-“fiction” book, I am not really looking for a window into the future of the mess we currently have, what we are already experiencing. I’d like to look further forward, perhaps to what comes after that mess.

    But if “Brave New World” or “1984” are for you, then this is totally recommended.

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