Archive for the ‘Books’ Category

books, october 2007

It’s been a while since I did a book’s I’ve read update. And really, the reason I do it is to ensure I don’t go out and buy doubles, because I do have a pile of “books I want to read”. Maybe I should use LibraryThing (USD$25, lifetime) or AllConsuming (free, integrates with 43things, etc.). But its nothing like walking into a physical bookstore, and whipping out your phone, and hitting the blog, to do a search ;)

  • The Google Story – David A. Vise – an amazing read, about a company that started in a university. Lots of gems, not that I didn’t already know most of them, but still, useful. Explaining 20% time, Google hacks, even a recipe from the chef, just gives you a good idea of the whole Google family.
  • NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming)… The new art and science of getting what you want – Dr. Harry Alder – I liked this book, but I felt it was filled with too much theory. It isn’t until past halfway through that you learn to control the situation. I think it could have focused on a more howto-styled approach, to ensure that the reader finds no hassle controlling their next subject!
  • The Tipping Point – Malcolm Gladwell – great book, I only wish I’d read it earlier. Crossing the threshold is most interesting, differentiating between connectors/mavens/salesmen, how exceptional people start epidemics, stickyness factors, and so much more. I’d encourage anyone attempting to build up a community or work with an OSS community to read this.
  • The Undercover Economist – Tim Harford – I love reading about economics, and this book continued fuelling my interest. I think to technology folk, what’s most interesting is how Tim put in words, how most technology nowadays is so easy to create/replicate, and since there’s a lack of scarcity, these companies move/fold quickly. There’s more to the book than just those three pages, I’d recommend this highly (in fact, I got a copy for Giuseppe in Heidelberg for just this purpose – he book-swapped with me, I got the God Delusion, which I haven’t read yet).
  • Founders At Work – Jessica Livingston – Excellent read. About companies you use currently. Or used (there have been some deaths, or sites that lost out the scarcity war). A must read, because Jessica gets into the founders’ heads.
  • Bella Tuscany – Frances Mayes – wanting to complete my reading interest in all things Frances Mayes, I just had to read this. And its only made me want to go to Tuscany a lot more (from what I hear, its filled with foreign tourists and not Italians nowadays, because of her books – I’m told Sardinia might be a better bet :P)
  • The Year of Yes – Maria Headley – A girl from a small town in the US, moves to New York, and says “yes” to all manner of men that ask her out on dates. For a whole year. She found a partner in the end, which I found kinda ironic (but I guess this is what fairytales are made of). It left me asking the question: why would a 21-year old girl do this? Was the sole purpose to write about it?
  • English as a Second F*cking Language – Sterling Johnson – While English is my first language (and realistically, my only language that I can read/write/converse fluently in), this book was too hard to not pick up. Saw this in a bookstore in Germany, and boy is it funny. Teaches you all the stuff you really shouldn’t use, but hey, its humorous!

Tab Cleanup

Twitter as a micro-news outlet
The other day, I was on a train, and witnessed something interesting – 3 drunk blokes were chatting up girls, got a little violent (throwing rubbish at people, asking a bloke to vacate his seat, etc.), and the cops were called in. Then, we stopped at Parliament and stayed there for about 40 minutes. On the last train of the night. Turns out, being an underground train station, a lot of other trains were backlogged, so Ben Barren told another train driver what the situation was, all thanks to the power of Twitter. What it looked like on Twitter – thanks Cris, aka Mr. Skitch :)

Google Code for Educators
Here comes free courseware, created especially for CS educators. There are currently tutorials on AJAX Programming, and Distributed Systems with sample course content as well. Video lectures exist just as well. So if you’re a busy professor, or sitting in a CS faculty and wondering what’s new and what might be hip to teach this semester, consider the Google Code for Educators site.

The Podcast Network
Cameron Reilly is the host of an amazing show, G’Day World, and he’s also the convenor for the Melbourne Online Digital Media. The other thing he’s done is create the world’s first podcast network (The Podcast Network – TPN). An interesting interview with him in an issue of the Australian Anthill, titled 24-hour podcast people. Cam’s a really interesting bloke to chat with – from podcasting to Facebook to Second Life.

Squeezed Books
One of the things I do after reading a management book, or biographies, is write summaries of my thoughts and take notes about it in my blog in my books category. This is what Squeezed Books is all about – summaries of books. If you’re too busy, or just want a summary before reading the book, this might be the exact site for you. Take for example the summary of The Tipping Point – now, when I write my quick summary/review, I’ll have to write less text :)

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movies/books, july 2007

Surprisingly, managed to catch quite a bit this month.

  • Knocked Up – funny, good comedy, not worth the cinema ticket price, but funny (really!)
  • Harry Potter & The Order of the Phoenix – long, phenomenal, as I also had just read the book before-hand. Pity they chose to make Cho a “baddie’
  • Oceans 13 – loved this series, and this one’s just as excellent. Where’d they chuck Julia Roberts though?
  • Blow – feel sorry for those in the drug trade. Jailed repeatedly, but what else can you expect the pusher to do? I haven’t actually noticed many movie’s with Penelope Cruz in it either
  • Pride & Prejudice – interrupted a lot, but an interesting show. The book, as always, is more interesting.
  • Ferris Bueller’s Day Off – funny, can’t believe it took me this long to watch! A must see.
  • Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – if anyone ever tells me Indian movies are silly because people run around trees and sing songs, you’ve got to catch this, as not only do they do kung fu, they fly when they do it! Show was enjoyed though, on a projector against a wall (so it was a very cinema-like experience, minus the sticky floors, dirty chairs and smelly environment)
  • Premonition – slept half-way through, it might have been good, but all that dejavu made me doze off in the plane
  • Blades of Glory – funny, if not a little gay. One of the better comedies.

In book sense, I read quite a bit, but I probably don’t have anything to note about the Harry Potter series. I read book 5, 6 and 7, all in one weekend (Friday evening->Sunday). Yes, that means I read book 7 a little late, but who cares. I did take away some quick quotes: “Greatness inspires envy, envy engenders spite, spite spawns lies.” — Voldemort, in the Half-Blood Prince; “… but perhaps those who are best suited to ower are those who have never sought it. Those who have leadership thrust upon them, and take up the mantle because they must…” — Dumbledore.

Books: The No Asshole Rule, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man

Some of the more recent books that I’ve read are: The No Asshole Rule, Confessions of an Economic Hitman.The unread pile is well, still pretty high.

The No Asshole Rule, by Robert Sutton
I picked this up, thanks to numerous RSS feeds that I read stating this was a good read. And it was – its probably the most dog-eared book I own (next to Getting Things Done). Of the things I found useful were: common everyday actions that assholes use (its important to identify them, before they get to you), constructive confrontation, a Total Cost of Assholes (TCA) measurement, the incorrect ideas that “The more often you are right and the more often you win, the bigger jerk you can be“, recruiters that are assholes tend to hire those that are similar (assholes breed like rabbits), trivial power advantages can change the way people think and act (as Lord Acton used to say, power corrupts power, absolute power corrupts absolutely), pay (i.e. salary, remuneration) is the vivid sign of power difference, how to enforce the No Asshole Rule, tips for surviving an asshole ridden environment, relentlessly responding to irate people with calmness and respect, and most importantly, negative interactions have five times the effect on mood than positive interactions.

Of interest to those that work remotely: it seems that if you work mostly through email or conference calls (rather than face-to-face), you tend to fight more and trust each other less. This is due to the fact that facial expressions, verbal intonations, posture, and “group mood” can’t be communicated. Bob suggests “the technology may be fueling the problem rather than simply protecting you from it“.

I actually recommend the No Asshole Rule as a book to be read by all open source project contributors. If you work at home, or remotely, there are also tips and tricks to help you be a better person. In fact, reading through the book, I had already identified people I’d love to give a copy of the book to! I for one can tell you how bad it is when there’s an asshole on the project – I’ve faced a few in the last five or so years.

Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, by John Perkins
I don’t know how believable this story is, but if its anything to the truth, its one of those books that a lot of people might get angered by. I learned that the American Founding Fathers had envisioned the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. He puts the thought out that slavery still exists, its just in those factories in far-away lands making your Nike shoes, and Apple iPods – economically speaking, these people, while being exploited, are economically better off by earning even a tiny minimum wage (by international standards) that allow them to live a fairly average life in their countries, no? Its better than not working. He successfully predicts that the US dollar can crash badly when the OPEC nations look for a stronger currency, say like the Euro. This was back in 2002, and today in 2007, we’re seeing exactly this happen (thus currencies like the AUD are doing so much better against the USD, while countries like Malaysia who are “basket pegged” perform worse).

At least I’ve come to learn that the US State Department has a section on their website entitled Identifying Misinformation! They ask if John dreamed up a fantasy? Possible, but unlikely – I’m of the belief that EHMs exist to this very day. Maybe never to the degree that John Perkins states…

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books, march 2007

Since my last foray into writing book reviews, I figured it made a little more sense to get a few more out of the bag, that I remember, since then.

  • Losing My Virginity by Richard Branson
  • Amazing autobiography. Does things in the name of fun, has become a billionaire, over and over, and has got some really practical advice about running a company (and now, companies) on a shoestring budget. Partnnership, diversification, is clearly key.

  • iCon by Jeffrey Young & William Simon
  • Steve Jobs, Apple, Pixar. Successes over and over, but there were pains at the start. Management mistakes to not make. Probably a good read for any Mac fan.

  • Freakonomics by Steven D. Levitt & Stephen J. Dubner
  • Simply interesting, its a must read. Drop in violent crime, in thanks to abortion? Drug dealers who still live with their moms, because they don’t really make much money? Interesting scenarios, that will make you think, for certain. Most entertaining reading, picking the book up, makes it very hard to put it down till it was done.

  • Lonely Planet: Thailand
  • Dodgy copy picked up while in Siem Reap, but served its purpose of giving me enough information to survive in Bangkok.

  • Lonely Planet: Cambodia
  • Without this, I would have had no Siem Reap trip. Truly used this, plus the driver we hired, to have a good six day holiday, touring the Angkor, and the regions that most don’t visit. The book was mighty handy, and will probably serve well when writing the travelogue.

  • A Year In The World by Frances Mayes
  • Reading this was actually inspirational, in the sense that it paved my way for last December’s travels. I actually had a passion to explore, plan to a certain extent, and leave some parts of travel to chance. I must say, I’ve never had a better amount of time, travelling, and its all thanks to her joyous sense of adventure and travel. Recommended reading if life’s feeling like a rut, and you’re just wating to escape into a holiday.

  • Under The Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes
    I read this after reading A Year In The World, as I absolutely adore Frances Mayes style. The recipes are typically helpful, and the idea of living such a Bohemian lifestyle, will make you want to visit Italy.
  • God’s Callgirl by Carla Van Raay
  • A memoir, of a Dutch girl, who’s family emigrated to Australia. What’s interesting is she grows up in a full-on Catholic environment, goes on into the convent to become a nun, is a nun, then leaves for freedom. Upon leaving, her sex drive seems to be active, and she becomes a prostitute. This is her story, about self-sabotage, and being a working girl. Probably a very useful text for women’s studies.

  • Kitchen Confidential by Anthony Bourdain
  • I am a big fan of the series, on Discovery Travel & Adventure. When I saw the book lying at the bookstore, I had to pick it up. Its a gripping tale spanning two decades of life as a cook. Starting from the bottom, right to being a chef in his own kitchen, he paints a very interesting story, of what it’s like to be behind the scenes, at a restaurant. There’s also practical advice for those wanting to cook (at chef levels, even). What makes this book highly interesting is all the anecdotes, of life as a chef. Its definitely a recommended memoir. Now to find his other book, A Cook’s Tour.

Linux (performance, server, security) related book reviews

I took a vacation recently, which involved heading down to Hobart, for some rest & relaxation. And lots of food (read: oysters, seafood, yum!). I packed my suitcase with some books for some late night reading, and am pleased to provide some form of review.

Linux Server Hacks by Rob Filkenger was definitely interesting. I’d say I found at least 1/4 of the hacks useful, with others probably being common sense (or maybe I already knew them). There were some useful scripts, and overall while this book doesn’t earn a keeper on my shelves, I did take away some useful bits and pieces: xargs tips, looking for setgid/setuid binaries, hdparm tuning, rsync backups, iptables fun, a tool called vtund that I’ve never used, ntop, their very own httptop, and a few more.

Linux Performance Tuning and Capacity Planning by Jason R Fink and Matthew D. Sherer had some rather basic and shallow information, that you’d have learnt as part of the LPI Level One certification at least. There was a section on network tuning as well, which is important with things like NFS. I was hoping I’d see some details about AFS (because I know a very large install base), alas zilch. But there are good bits of basic information, like if you’ve ever wondered what RSS means from the ps output? A good introduction to LVM exists; this book was published in 2001, you hardly notice much about IPV6 in their networking chapters. And afaik, TCP ECN has been enabled by default for a while – sure it caused misery for a while, its all good. This isn’t a keeper on my packed bookshelf.

Linux Security Cookbook by Daniel J. Barrett, Richard E. Silverman, and Robert G. Byrnes seems to be woefully out of date, but maybe its because it was published in 2003. I found the examples of creating PAM-aware applications useful, and there were some good tips about sudo (have you thought that restricting su to a sudo user would be a secure solution? Apparently it isn’t, thought combined with SELinux I’d think otherwise). Yet another non-keeper for the bookshelves, though it’d be helpful if there existed an updated review copy covering SELinux, AppArmor (of which I know nothing about) and a whole lot more new happenings in the last three years.

What I did find as a keeper was: Optimizing Linux(R) Performance: A Hands-On Guide to Linux(R) Performance Tools (HP Professional Series). I’ll review this later as I soak up more of the text.

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