Morrolan wrote:I'm reading the Iron Druid series. Quite entertaining, lighthearted fantasy based in current time line. For some reason I have dropped the heavy stuff for a bit.
brite wrote:Morrolan wrote:I'm reading the Iron Druid series. Quite entertaining, lighthearted fantasy based in current time line. For some reason I have dropped the heavy stuff for a bit.
I liked the Iron Druid series... ain't nothing wrong with brain candy... Iron Druid, Stephanie Plum and Harry Dresden are my brain candies of choice... the rest of the time, I tend to go with politics, history and philosophy... and cook books... I'm a glutton for cook books...
Hap wrote:Add C.E. Murphy's Walker Papers series, and anything by Simon R. Green to this list for me.
Rommie wrote:Currently I have two going, "To Tuva or Bust!" about Feynman's dream of visiting the nation of Tuva, and "Cloud Atlas." Which I started like months ago but stopped and am now trying to get back into.
FZR1KG wrote:I'm currently reading "Service manual", written by two different authors yet both have a very similar style and format.
Both are a really hard read and require you to purchase the app so you can have a truly unique interactive experience.
They have created a world where there are numerous special, almost magical things that one needs to move forward through the chapters but barely describes them. The reader is expected to have a very creative and vivid imagination when trying to reconstruct and deconstruct the function of these magical devices or purchase the things as plugin's specific to each app version and there are so many different versions it is daunting.
The first part is obviously written by a Japanese author who is un-named. The series is called "Isuzu Rodeo".
Overall its a very serious book though its still an interesting tale of extreme space utilisation and bad engineering but has many quite comical chapters.
The second part is called, "Dodge Dakota", a far more comical story than the first. Its hard to tell if the designers of the app had a wild sense of humour or the author was a satirical genius who has yet to make his mark in this fascinating genre.
How could he not be, its a story about American ingenuity gone wrong in a modern fast paced world but the author is obviously Chinese.
I personally don't recommend either and both come with highly expensive apps that are prone to faults and require frequent updates or they fail to perform as advertised. Both apps needed far more development before being released on the unsuspecting public.
My suspicion is that management decided to cut costs then proceeded to slash funding on basic sanity checks creating apps that have little internal consistency and are non intuitive. To offset this, they spent funds on flashy covers that lure the reader into thinking they are getting something they are not.
One wonders if the following old joke was based on a real live person, who went on to be an app designer:
A gynecologist decided he wanted to learn about cars and enrolled himself into a automotive mechanics course.
He worked hard and his teacher was very supportive.
His final exam was to replace the pistons on a Ford F100.
After a days work the car was running with new pistons and he passed with 120%
He questioned the result, as he knew the exam was not graded.
His teacher explained that he got 100% because he did everything perfectly.
He got the bonus 20% because he did it all though the exhaust pipe.
FZR1KG wrote:Well, at least someone got my sarcastic post
Falstaff wrote:At the moment, I'm reading FWIS. It's a little disjointed and chaotic.
Morrolan wrote:i just started Escape from Camp 14, which is the story of a North Korean man born in one of the country's concentration camps.
incredible.
Falstaff wrote:At the moment, I'm reading FWIS. It's a little disjointed and chaotic.
FZR1KG wrote:Falstaff wrote:At the moment, I'm reading FWIS. It's a little disjointed and chaotic.
You should have seen the old board! rofl
Rommie wrote:Currently I have two going, "To Tuva or Bust!" about Feynman's dream of visiting the nation of Tuva, and "Cloud Atlas." Which I started like months ago but stopped and am now trying to get back into.
FZR1KG wrote:Well, at least someone got my sarcastic post
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