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Do you read books??

If so, suggest a book that you liked so much

Comments
  • 2
    48 laws of power
    - learned so much dark shit that i can apply for my evil plan to rule the world

    Social engineering: the art of human hacking
    - extremely dark psychological manipulative strategies, immoral and some illegal ways to exploit people for your own personal gain
  • 0
    I’m rereading Sapiens. It’s fun if you like anthropology and history.
    Hoping to go for a novel after I finish it.
  • 2
    Fictional: Peter F Hamiltons books.

    The best series is the one starting with Pandoras Star.

    Non fictional:
    Life 3.0 was interesting.
    Design Patterns are useful.
  • 4
    A Programmer's Introduction to Mathematics

    By Jeremy Kun

    Was suggested to me by Apples senior director of engineering. Very useful
  • 0
    @adamjkeith I've been meaning to get into maths I'll give this a go
  • 1
    One of my faves is 1984.

    This is the best audio book version IMO:

    I also like boberse series (especially the first book).

    Pragmatic programmer (both editions), Working Effectively with Legacy Code, Xunit testing, etc
  • 1
    My favorite is Suicide notes by Michal Thomas ford. (If I remember the name correctly.)
  • 1
    @-red I fucking loved Children of Time, even though I'm an arachnophobe
    I should read the others
  • 0
    Lovecraft. Anything goes
  • 0
    @b2plane excellent way to recognize SHIT people.This book is despicable, but it helps those of us that are not used to the idea of fucking others to get what we want
  • 0
    Games people play by eric berne, finished it last week it was a pretty quick and fun read
  • 2
    Cory Doctorow:
    little brother
    information doesn’t want to be free
    chokepoint capitalism
    attack surface

    prof brian cox, andrew cohen
    the planets

    neil de grasse tyson
    astrophysics for people in hurry

    Jeremy N. Smith
    Breaking And Entering: The Extraordinary Story of a Hacker Called "Alien"
    Epic measurements

    depends what you’re looking for
  • 0
    The art of war, by Sun Tzu.
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