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.
tolerance 6 hours ago [-]
People like me may be more interested in this blog post:
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
sdevonoes 5 minutes ago [-]
Weird. I got bored with the Tanenbaum books (because they are very abstract and theoretical). The 3 piece book OS was very refreshing and I actually learned stuff
ofrzeta 1 hours ago [-]
The Stallings book is very good.
ozgrakkurt 1 hours ago [-]
I found it mentions too many out of context things. I’m not in a position to judge if it is technically good
vjay15 2 hours ago [-]
I remember reading Tanenbaum, the dino book right? It is amazing
ozgrakkurt 1 hours ago [-]
Dino book is written by someone else. Also found that one boring
ungut 4 hours ago [-]
Lol, requires LinkedIn and can't parse valid email addresses. This is what senior+ software development looks like.
sudb 2 hours ago [-]
Famously valid email address parsing is far from trivial[1] - I wouldn't be so quick to judge!
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.
clumsysmurf 7 hours ago [-]
"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.
globalnode 5 hours ago [-]
I would love to see a maths version of this bookclub
LPisGood 6 hours ago [-]
Well I don’t have Linkedin so that’s a shame. The idea is very good.
simonw 6 hours ago [-]
I expect if you use www.linkedin.com/i-do-not-have-linkedin as the URL Phil will let you in anyway.
ndneighbor 4 hours ago [-]
confirmed
(I help host nycsystems w/ Phil- we don't mind, just an easier way to know who is who other than email)
LPisGood 6 hours ago [-]
I wonder if someone could be arrested for gaining unauthorized access to a computer system via fraud under US law for doing that.
ornornor 5 hours ago [-]
What? How?
tardedmeme 5 hours ago [-]
The computer fraud and abuse act is extremely broad to the point of absurdity.
jruohonen 6 hours ago [-]
My sentiment too: a nice idea worth supporting but the execution has something to improve. In addition to LinkedIn:
"All discussion is via a Google Group."
Rendered at 10:35:01 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
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.
https://notes.eatonphil.com/2024-05-30-how-i-run-book-clubs....
1. https://www.regular-expressions.info/email.html
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.
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 help host nycsystems w/ Phil- we don't mind, just an easier way to know who is who other than email)