This is so neat, as Phil mentioned in the How to run a software bookclub post, out of a group of 500, only 1-2%, 5-10 people may contribute with comments. But he lets the group grow in size because it is minimal overhead and many "lurkers" say they really appreciate reading the comments and get a lot out of it.
I am left wondering is there any way to see past comments on book discussions? I would love to read the discussions as I go through a book already done by the club on my own.
This is great. I sort of feel a lack of fora for discussing technical books over a longer lifetime than merely say, the HN front page.
While there is a very good selection of readings, it's unfortunate that both LinkedIn and Google are being used here, especially if the discussion is text-only.
This is so neat, as Phil mentioned in the How to run a software bookclub post, out of a group of 500, only 1-2%, 5-10 people may contribute with comments. But he lets the group grow in size because it is minimal overhead and many "lurkers" say they really appreciate reading the comments and get a lot out of it.
I am left wondering is there any way to see past comments on book discussions? I would love to read the discussions as I go through a book already done by the club on my own.
People like me may be more interested in this blog post:
https://notes.eatonphil.com/2024-05-30-how-i-run-book-clubs....
It looks amazing as a reading list. I am also reading the OS book by Tanenbaum since the three piece book got very boring after a bit of reading
I remember reading Tanenbaum, the dino book right? It is amazing
Dino book is written by someone else. Also found that one boring
The Stallings book is very good.
I found it mentions too many out of context things. I’m not in a position to judge if it is technically good
Lol, requires LinkedIn and can't parse valid email addresses. This is what senior+ software development looks like.
Famously valid email address parsing is far from trivial[1] - I wouldn't be so quick to judge!
1. https://www.regular-expressions.info/email.html
This is great. I sort of feel a lack of fora for discussing technical books over a longer lifetime than merely say, the HN front page.
While there is a very good selection of readings, it's unfortunate that both LinkedIn and Google are being used here, especially if the discussion is text-only.
"High Performance Browser Networking"
I wish there was an update to this book, reading it a while back I think it covered some proposed HTTP/2 features but definitely not HTTP/3.
Many of the issues discussed had to do with TCP itself.
I would love to see a maths version of this bookclub
Well I don’t have Linkedin so that’s a shame. The idea is very good.
I expect if you use www.linkedin.com/i-do-not-have-linkedin as the URL Phil will let you in anyway.
I wonder if someone could be arrested for gaining unauthorized access to a computer system via fraud under US law for doing that.
What? How?
The computer fraud and abuse act is extremely broad to the point of absurdity.
confirmed
(I help host nycsystems w/ Phil- we don't mind, just an easier way to know who is who other than email)
My sentiment too: a nice idea worth supporting but the execution has something to improve. In addition to LinkedIn: