Like the title says, what's on your list, what did you just finish, what did you think of it???

Personally I'm finally almost done with Resisting the Virtual Life, a collection of essays from the mid 90s about the negative outcomes, that were already being realized, and that they foresaw on the horizon, of forcing computers into every aspect of our lives. It's been pretty good so far. A bit of anticommunism in one essay, but many of the others have been spot on, and the authors' perspectives have given me a lot to chew on as someone probably born after most of the essays were written. A good focus on how not inevitable "progress" is, and how political the decisions on how and where to use this technology is, as well as a robust smackdown of the "everyone will be highly educated highly skilled highly paid computer workers in the future" narrative that came along with the rollout of computerization and the internet. I'd really love to talk to someone about this book honestly.

The second to last essay I read was about repetitive stress injuries and other workplace harms arising from increasing computerization, and I was really curious if the authors fears turned out to be overblown or if we are still mostly just ignoring and downplaying those as a serious issue. The last one was a bit unsettling and started giving me Psychopolitics/Mark Fisher vibes with the descriptions of how the enmeshing of computers, education, and psychology would serve to shape our very ways of thinking.

If anyone wants to read it I'll try to scan it, though my copy has writing in the earlier essays from a previous owner.

  • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    I finished The Soviet System of Government by John N. Hazard last week. It was interesting between all the bias induced eye rolling.

    Earlier this week I read Stephen King's If It Bleeds and then his new one Holly. Pretty standard King slop, post-Mr. Mercedes. Rather funny in that a conservative/lib leaning friend of mine was telling me how much they enjoyed Holly as a character and then a day later, aftet reading Holly, saying they didn't like the book. I cracked it open and it took place in 2021 at the height of the Delta variant. It was a depressingly amusing reminder of the half-assed ways liberals responded to covid and the vaccines. He has not asked me, someone who is still masking, what I thought of the book.

    • YearOfTheCommieDesktop [they/them]
      hexagon
      ·
      1 year ago

      He has not asked me, someone who is still masking, what I thought of the book.

      They never do. Don't want to be reminded of uncomfortable thoughts/facts