Glens Falls (NY) Online Book Discussion Group discussion
ABOUT BOOKS AND READING
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What are you reading or what books have you read or heard about? (Part TWELVE) Ongoing general thread.

Werner, enjoy the mystery book. I think it's great the way you use the time spent in the car to listen to audio books. I should do that more often.
Thanks for explaining about the toolbar. I probably wouldn't have noticed but now that I know about it, I can make use of it.

Right above the name of the group. It has:
"goodreads" "My Books" "Browse" & such on it.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Jim, I'm exhausted just THINKING about the amount of information Skloot's book. Even your review had my mind whirling. I don't know how you can digest all that information! I guess the answer is that you are very interested in those areas. I can't make myself WANT to read stuff like that.


You really should try to learn how to use your car's CD player. It can be very useful. But I suppose it would be nice to hear a real live human read a story to me. I could stop and ask the reader questions and discuss each line, one at a time, if I'd want to. Maybe your method had advantages I hadn't thought of. LOL

I generally read 2 of the articles each day, so I had time to think about each one & even do a little side research when indicated. I found it an interesting buffet - a taste of many areas. It's not as if I was studying each subject in depth. In some cases, I have read other articles or books that complimented these articles, but some were new ground to me. That's part of the charm of this series of books.


Jim, I guess if you take it a bit at a time, it's easier to enjoy and digest. Reading your review seemed like a wallop of information! LOL

Oh, Werner, I'm not good with manuals! I hate having to figure out how to change the clock-time on our car clock or on our new stove's digital clock. Give me an old-fashioned analogue clock anytime!
Good luck with that manual! LOL


Like you, I find it hard to adjust to changes in technical procedures. We just have to keep doing our best.



https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Nina, I have read only one of his books, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Even if he were alive and wrote 10 more books, I wouldn't read one of them. Not my cup of tea.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Sounds like interesting reading, Jim. I might try it.

(which was adapted from the book: The Danish Girl)
If so, how did it end?
I finished the audio book today. I'm wondering if the film's ending is the same as the book. I didn't like the ending.
See my review at: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Yes, Nina. The DVD is now available from Netflix. I should receive it after I mail back my current one.

Nina, sorry to hear that you have a fracture. I will be sending good thoughts your way and thinking of you. I hope you will mend quickly.
It's so easy to fall. Sometimes, no matter how careful we are, we manage to trip and fall. And to make matters worse, at our age we need help getting up, even if we're not hurt much. I do hope you're going to be alright.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Ah, I recently finished listening to Walter Isaacson's book, Steve Jobs. If the Hackers book is as good as the Jobs book, it must be good. Isaacson does a good job.
The only trouble I had reading the Jobs book was that I was unfamiliar with the tech talk at certain parts of the book. However, I still got a good idea of Job's personality.
I probably would have similar trouble with the Hackers book, Jim. But you, being in the tech field, probably devoured every bit!

While searching for ideas on what to read next and scouring my overly-long "To-Read" list, I found this book and decided to try it. I borrowed it from our public library yesterday and started reading it today. I'm not sure I will be able to stick with it, but I hope I will. I'm hoping it will draw me in. This is not the usual type of book (about Civil War battles) that I like to read.
Funny how we happen to come across certain books. That's always been interesting to me, a sort of private "etymology" of book discovery.
See my partial review here: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

On the downside, Isaacson didn't get into business networks & security at all, a gross oversight. Unix dominated networks at first & Novell had a huge presence in the late 80s, but a user had no rights on either network unless specifically granted by knowledgeable techs & businesses paid dearly for them & their support. Neither had a good desktop, if they had one at all. IBM's OS/2 was far better than Win 3.1, but IBM didn't push it nor scale their servers for small businesses. Apple ignored small business & never attracted application software due to their proprietary architecture. Microsoft (MS) sold an easy to use desktop interface that anyone could network & write apps for. Any PC could act as a server & it didn't take much knowledge to set up, so most consumers & small businesses went to Windows. Security was an afterthought until the late 90s, after the WWW connected them all. We've played hell trying to implement decent security ever since, but applications kept us locked in to this OS for all its faults. Still, Microsoft now has over 90% of the desktops compared to a mere 5% by Apple & Linux has even less.
He also didn't discuss how Microsoft often came out with innovations ahead of Apple, but did so a bit too early & didn't make them usable enough. For instance, Microsoft had a tablet & gave it up before Apple made its iPad. It's a bit bewildering. Microsoft had ebooks way before they were cool (Y2K) & they officially quit supporting them & their reader 5 years ago, just when ebooks really came into their own.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microso...
It's a shame, because I have quite a few books in .lit format. Luckily, Calibre converts them to other ebook formats easily.

James Alexander Thom is a historical fiction writer who does excellent research on his books. The ideas and culture and feelings of this period (1770 to 1813) spring to life. Review coming soon.

I have started No Graves As Yet. It is the beginning of a five volume series about World War I. Anne Perry has written many historical mysteries and her knowledge of history is serving her well in this book. Anne Perry really knows her stuff in creating the details of a historical period and good characterization. I have read a lot about World War II; but I do not know nearly as much about World War I. So far, the book is very entertaining and thought provoking.

... Microsoft often came out with innovations ahead of Apple, but did so a bit too early & didn't make them usable enough. For instance, Microsoft had a tablet & gave it up before Apple made its iPad. It's a bit bewildering. Microsoft had ebooks way before they were cool (Y2K) & they officially quit supporting them & their reader 5 years ago, just when ebooks really came into their own."
It's interesting to see how each company went in different directions. Steve Jobs made some bad choices in the beginning. For example, his NEXT cube computer failed. But he didn't give up. Jobs finally got it right when he went in the direction of the iTunes, iMac, iPod, iPhone, and iPad. I understand the "i" stands for Internet or Information. (They had a meeting about choosing names and that idea won out.) One of Steve Job's big talents was in making theatrical presentations of his new products. You might say he was a "marketing genius".
"10 Lessons From Steve Jobs That Every Marketer Must Learn":
http://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/10-...
"Steve Jobs: 7 Lessons from a Marketing Genius":
https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=...


Mary JL, I don't know if this is a coincidence or not, but one of the characters in The Thunder of Captains (about the Battle of Saratoga) is named Panther. I've just begun to read it.
Thanks for telling us about _Panther in the Sky_. I enjoy historical fiction and the Native-American genre sounds interesting. I've added the book to my keep-in-mind shelf.

Mary JL, we have another coincidence here! I recently watched a documentary about Anne Perry, a writer I know very little about. (I haven't read anything by her.) The documentary is called "Anne Perry: Interiors" (2009).
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1403119/?...
"Anne Perry's name does not only stand for the crime-ridden Victorian world of her novels. It is also attached to a murder that took place when she was only 15. The story made it to the big screen in the 1990s - the film "Heavenly Creatures". The documentary ("ANNE PERRY - INTERIORS") accompanies the writer and offers a uniquely intimate insight into the world of one of the most intriguing figures of the literary genre. "
http://www.amazon.com/Anne-Perry-Inte...
"Anne Perry is one of the leading authors of our time. She specialises in crime novels and is famous worldwide. But her books hide a very real tale of murder and everlasting regret. This insightful documentary reveals the genius and challenged mind behind the tome of her work."
The documentary includes her brother who helped do historical research for her books. Very interesting view behind the scenes. Anne Perry seems to have a very strong, serious personality. The documentary shows how she writes curled up in a sort of recliner with paper and pen. Another person is shown transcribing Perry's hard-to-read handwriting onto type-written copies.


"Anne Perry: Interiors" (2009)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1403119/?...

"10 Lessons From Steve Jobs That Every Marketer Must Learn":
http://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/10-...
"Steve Jobs: 7 Lessons from a Marketing Genius":
https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=...

No doubt about that! I hardly remember the stuff I read a few months ago! LOL
Enjoy _The Black Arrow_, Werner.

It's much more interesting than I thought it would be!
See my review so far at: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_...
It shows his picture and his poor teeth. The audio-book says that Ripley was always ashamed of his appearance. What a shame!

http://pic20.picturetrail.com/VOL1837...
http://pic20.picturetrail.com/VOL1837...
Unfortunately, I don't remember much about it.
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I've been critical above of Goodreads' new format changes, and I think justly so overall. But in fairness, I should mention one change I actually like. Before, the Goodreads toolbar at the top of the page or frame became hidden if you scrolled a ways down the page; to use it, you had to scroll back up to the top, or use the "back to top" button at the very bottom. Now, no matter how far you scroll, the toolbar follows you --or perhaps more accurately, it remains stationary, but the page unrolls beneath it without making it change position in relation to the current screen-- and you can click on options from it from anywhere on the page. (Handy!)