Hacker news books
To vote on existing books from the list, hacker news books, beside each book there is a link vote for this book clicking it will add that book to your votes. To vote on books not in the list or books you couldn't find in the list, you can click on the hacker news books add books to this list and then choose from your books, or simply search.
Mine would be The Utopians trilogy[1], I recommend it to anyone looking for a good sci-fi read. Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents I'm a person that struggles with boundary-setting and have spent numerous years in relationships that have left me as less-than I was before. Imagine people-pleasing to an absolute fault, and being more of a chameleon that adapts to avoid conflicts. This has led to problems of identity, and deriving my sense of worth through others which isn't healthy. Fortunately, I do not have the same problems professionally and part of my people-pleasing skills have been put to good use there. However, history continued and continues to repeat itself to this day.
Hacker news books
Read 70 comments. Read 35 comments. Read 42 comments. Read 66 comments. Read 40 comments. Thinking, Fast and Slow. Read 36 comments. Read 17 comments. Working Effectively with Legacy Code. Read 48 comments. Read 27 comments. Read 26 comments. JavaScript: The Good Parts. Read 59 comments. Read 41 comments.
I'm talking more about the earlier point about recommendation from your neighbour only being reliable because of the consequences of a poor review.
Thinking, Fast and Slow. Snow Crash. The Selfish Gene. Atlas Shrugged. Brave New World. Benjammer on June 2,
Hi all, creator here : I launched Shepherd. Then I crunched that data and broke it by genre, age range, and when it was published. Thanks, Ben P. Semaphor 3 months ago next [—]. The idea is cool, but I have some suggestions. I just ran out of time to do that this year this is the first year I've done this. I will also rethink what data I show for as I want to better show which authors picked which books visually.
Hacker news books
The year is coming to an end. Time to look back and reflect. What are the books you've read in ? Which books made you change your mind or you simply enjoyed? And which books would you recommend to others for ? Fiction: "Yumi and the Nightmare Painter" and "Tress of the Emerald Sea" - Two of Brandon Sanderson's "secret projects" that he released this year and easily my favorites of the bunch. Tress is just such a fun adventure and Yumi left me an emotional wreck by the end. This, alongside "Agents of Dreamland", is rather short and great for getting through in a couple sittings. It's all about taking on an entity that you actively can't remember the existence of.
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I will try to answer this question. People are the same, but now you can backup your conscience onto a chip. Thank you. It was my therapist that recommended it to me. NET devs, but even that's a terribly poor assumption -- I know plenty of devs who don't complain about languages I consider absolutely terrible. US should do this too! Also, this is poor advice as this book is so big and the paper so thin it is absolutely horrible as toilet paper. Kahneman's book Thinking Fast and Slow a number of years back and it did present some pretty clear looking graphs demonstrating loss aversion of iirc. Great recommendation! I remember thinking, while watching "The Mentalist[1]" that people who are practiced in that sort of deception that the character Patrick Jane used probably mainly understand how to execute exploits on the interface between System 1 and System 2 thinking. Anna Karenina. That being said. Very simple, straightforward read. Europe's obsessions with exploration and conquests were driven by the scientific revolution. Dalio's deep thinking is amazing.
Now that the decade is coming to a close, what where the most personally influential books you read? Which impacted you the most either personally or professionally? The ones you learned the most from?
The like the challenge of it being a massive book, but I remember finding the two towers pretty boring as a kid myself. But if you read a book called No More Mr. Perhaps it's that Kahneman is in the "uncanny valley" between science and popular writing. It was super straightforward. If infinity isn't actually a thing in our universe, then maybe we're taking some risks by using math with all these infinite limits and integers. It is again brilliant, I could not put it down, and I highly recommend it especially to those already familiar with her writing. The entire "Murderbot" series by Martha Wells is amazing, the writing style, humor and the whole story line is a must-read for sci-fi fans The "Silo" series by Hugh Howey is excellent, I read it after watching the TV series from Amazon, and no regrets. First, most people aren't qualified to have and give their opinions on most topics. As mentioned elsewhere, the narrative and writing style can be distracting, but the concepts are timeless and extremely powerful. I couldn't put them down. Originally I wanted to publish a top 50, but there are too many ties. To surgeons performing pre-surgery checks, vastly improving patient outcome and surgery success statistics. Thanks for the review and the links! The Mark Manson one was not good. Wikipedia itself is of course lovely for high information density and is my go-to resource.
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