Sunday, May 18. 2008Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Day 18: Prof. Lessig
[Ed: Even though the project was a failure, I had already written a few, and just left them around to publish at the
appropriate time]
Today, we'll focus on Lawrence Lessig, professor of law at Stanford Law School and founder of the Stanford Center for Internet and Society Lessig is the author of "Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace" and an expert on the issues of copyright and "copyleft. His lecture is here, and three of his books: The Future of Ideas Free Culture Code Version 2.0 Sunday, May 11. 2008Comments (3) Trackbacks (0) <Insert Apology Here>
So, I know I promised to stop flooding the front page with links to books, but I had to do one last one because it's
only available for free download until the 13th - STAR
WARS: LEGACY OF THE FORCE: BETRAYAL.
Blurb from the page: Have you ever wondered what happened to Han, Luke and Leia after the events of Return of the Jedi? Now, in BETRAYAL, the legacy that began with Anakin Skywalker has finally come full circle. Join Han, Luke, Leia, and the other heroes of the New Jedi Order in their epic struggle to maintain peace in the galaxy, as a new threat rises from the most unexpected of places. Sunday, May 11. 2008Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Day 11: Another Sunday Special
This week's video
lecture is from Brewster Kahle, Director and Co-founder of the Internet Archive, and originator of the print-on-demand Bookmobile.
Therefore, it seems only appropriate to link to two books available in the Internet Archive.
First, there's Eric Raymond's The Art of Unix Programming. Secondly, how about Richard F. Burton's "The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Volume 1" (sometimes called "1,001 Arabian Nights") Thursday, May 8. 2008Comment (1) Trackbacks (0) 08: To Please our Robot Overlords
Did I say "Overlords"? I meant Protectors.
Information Theory, Inference, and Learning Algorithms, one of the texts you'll need if you want to take the Utah State University "Open CourseWare" course ECE7680 - Information Theory. Thicker than Blood which includes, starting on page 4, a ChangeLog of the revisions the book has gone through, starting with version 0.21...I wonder what happened to the revision notes prior to that. Wednesday, May 7. 2008Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Day 07: Paranoia
Intrusion Detection with SNORT:
Advanced IDS Techniques Using SNORT, Apache, MySQL, PHP, and ACID, part of the Bruce Perens' Open Source Series.
Also, the fine folks at Project Gutenberg bring us Moby Dick. Tuesday, May 6. 2008Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Day 06: Not Feeling Quippy Today
Yeah, I've got nothing clever for you today.
Data Structures and Algorithms with Object-Oriented Design Patterns is an interesting book - if you look at the left-hand side, you'll notice that the author is attempting to adapt the body of the text to multiple programming languages, including such surprising choices as Lua, Perl, and PHP. On the fiction front, we have John Sundman's novel, "Acts of the Apostles", described as a "techno-thriller novel". Monday, May 5. 2008Comments (3) Trackbacks (0) Day 05: In a Hurry
I'm still in the middle of upgrading some stuff on the server (sorry for the outage, BTW), so no fanfare today, just the
links:
Graphics Programming Black Book by Michael Abrash 1632 by Eric Flint - I don't normally go in for "historical fiction", especially not this sort, but I REALLY enjoyed this book (as well as the others in the series, which you can expect to find in future posts) Monday, May 5. 2008Comment (1) Trackbacks (0) Day 04: Sunday Special!
Eric Raymond's The
Cathedral and the Bazaar was a VERY key book in the formation of my interest in programming in
general, and open source in specific...but the theory expressed there wouldn't have gotten me very far if it hadn't been
for the implementation, in the form of the Debian Linux
distribution, and the excellent book Learning Debian GNU/Linux.
And what's so special about Sunday, you ask? I addition to the books of the day, Sundays will feature a link to one of a series of videos published by C-SPAN, in association with the US Library of Congress' John W. Kluge Center, on "The Library in the Digital Context". The first lecture features David Weinberger, one of the best known experts on "blogging" and coauthor of the bestselling book, "The Cluetrain Manifesto". Saturday, May 3. 2008Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Day 03: O'Reilly and Associates, Part I
I just realized that I should have been more clear in the initial post - "recreational" is defined as books
I would read recreationally
Such as the excellent book from O'Reilly and Associates titled Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution Personally, I was sad to see ORA's series on X11 go out of print, as there's still a lot to be said for the X11 framework/protocol, even though most people want to target Qt or the GNOME libraries instead. So I was happy to see they put them out under an "open book" license. You can find volume one of this collection on archive.org. Friday, May 2. 2008Comment (1) Trackbacks (0) Day 02: Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom / Programming from the Ground Up
[Ed: Typo'd Cory's last name - thanks, Johnny]
My very first experience with the writings of Cory Doctorow came from his book Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom. And, as long as we're on "firsts", how about Programming from the Ground Up, a book on writing assembly for Linux? Thursday, May 1. 2008Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) New Category, and an Experiment
My goal is to post a new article every day for the entire month of May linking to at least two books that can be read
for free online - one technical, one recreational.
For the initial post, I've chosen two that everyone should read: Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs (colloquially known as "the SICP") and the latest (2007) draft of Autonomy: Freedom of Thought, which is a bit rough in places but has some fun ideas
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Comments
Mon, 21.07.2008 19:30
No, but it is YOUR fault he's black.Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 13:09
And, I just have to say, I abs olutely love Chlorine's write- ups. I had no idea all that w as going on inside her h [...]Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 13:03
(The Balkans)Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 13:02
Fine, as far as Clarence is co ncerned he's just a black hear t anyway.Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 12:28
nope that's still racistComments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 10:22
hahaha "the balck guy." now w e're poking fun at his race an d country of origin!Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 10:01
How is referring to someone's skin color racist? While I ag ree that we might call him Dro w instead of "the balck [...]Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 09:04
Would it help if we referred t o him as a "black elf" instead ?Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 08:59
y'all are so racist. It's not Sol's fault he's black.Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 08:39
Washed up scientist?Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 08:11
No he isn't and no there wasn' t!Comments ()
Mon, 21.07.2008 08:10
Wait, Harcrit is illiterate? A nd there was a hug?Comments ()
Sat, 19.07.2008 23:27
I honestly can't pick a favori te act. While I though Act 1 was a bit slow, I feel it was a great setup to the res [...]Comments ()
Sat, 19.07.2008 22:47
I enjoyed every step, although I still think the first act w as the best. I've been singing it all weekend now.Comments ()
Fri, 18.07.2008 15:24
I think Act 1 was slow, but ta ken as a part of the whole I t hink it did a good job setting up.Comments ()