Monday, September 30, 2013

Review: Software Project Survival Guide


Software Project Survival Guide
Software Project Survival Guide by Steve McConnell

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I really enjoyed this, possibly the most concise and short of McConnell's software design and project management tomes. I found I labeled for reference many spots in this work: Customer's Bill of Rights, Survival Test Score (cf., Raleigh Model), a good overview of required elements of a software process around requirements. Among the points I found interesting was the research into the ineffeciency of open work bays vis-avis the need for continued focus by developers.

I also liked the broad view of vision documents and post mortems as this should be a broadly defined and controlled process, too. In there are such realistic caveats as "plan should not assume the team will work overtime" and support for scientific estimation processes and coding standards although I think he has left reality with "The best coding standards are .. less than 25 pages".



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Review: Street Player: My Chicago Story


Street Player: My Chicago Story
Street Player: My Chicago Story by Danny Seraphine

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Danny really delivers in this autobiography: The tale of his rise from Chicago gang thug to accomplished professional drummer makes a fascinating first act that leads to the globe-trotting, arena-filling years of Chicago's rule (alongside but over Blood, Sweat & Tears) of rock band with horns and a jazz bent. The tragedies and excess and eventual ousting lead to the most personal third act: Seraphine alone and struggling to find himself personally and professionally, which he does.



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Saturday, September 28, 2013

Review: Lunar Notes - Zoot Horn Rollo's Captain Beefheart Experience


Lunar Notes - Zoot Horn Rollo's Captain Beefheart Experience
Lunar Notes - Zoot Horn Rollo's Captain Beefheart Experience by Bill Harkleroad

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Bill Harkleroad went from Captain Beefheart protege to effective Magic Band musical director before leaving in his disgust and accomplished polythythmic/polyphonic recording in his wake. This very honest, open memoir reads like a transcript of Harkleroad in monologue: genuine and conversational. Decrypting the Don Van Vliet alter ego and recalling what shows and sessions he could, Harkleroad did take the time to turn his ears back to the Beefheart and Mallard recordings and give his track-by-track recollections, opinions, and looking-back assessment making this book also an informative listening guide.



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Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Review: The Violinist's Thumb: And Other Lost Tales of Love, War, and Genius, as Written by Ourgenetic Code


The Violinist's Thumb: And Other Lost Tales of Love, War, and Genius, as Written by Ourgenetic Code
The Violinist's Thumb: And Other Lost Tales of Love, War, and Genius, as Written by Ourgenetic Code by Sam Kean

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



A fascinating tour of our genetic code by the author of [b:The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements|7247854|The Disappearing Spoon And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements|Sam Kean|http://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1344265242s/7247854.jpg|8246153]. I particularly like the stories of Darwin's pet kissing bug, the clarification for me of Lamarkian/epigenetic effects, the early pioneers like chess and cigar enthusiast Mendel, and more, along with - of course - the loose-fingered subject of the title, violin virtuoso Paganini.



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Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Review: Self-Portrait of a Scoundrel


Self-Portrait of a Scoundrel
Self-Portrait of a Scoundrel by Chauncey Holt

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Really an amazing tale of an underworld Zelig renaissance man that was every wear: So. American & Caribbean coups, CIA wars in Indochina, keeping the books for Meyer Lansky, standing by Oswald while he passed out Fair Play for Cuba flyers and, of course, behind the Grassy Knoll on that fateful day in Dallas. He also could do anything: creative accounting with the best of them, military aviation, expert marksmanship, portraiture, document forgery, and more. Is it all true? I don't know, but it is a fascinating read full of facts on crime and cop figures that could be verified with lots of photos and documents and appendices with two lengthy interviews and more that purport to support his role as an unwilling bit player in an American coup by scorned Mafia-CIA-AntiCastro forces that all had it in for Kennedy.

I'll be doing an interview on my program this Sunday related to this book and the interview transcripts.



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Monday, September 23, 2013

Review: Self-Portrait of a Scoundrel


Self-Portrait of a Scoundrel
Self-Portrait of a Scoundrel by Chauncey Holt

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Really an amazing tale of an underworld Zelig renaissance man that was every wear: So. American & Caribbean coups, CIA wars in Indochina, keeping the books for Meyer Lansky, standing by Oswald while he passed out Fair Play for Cuba flyers and, of course, behind the Grassy Knoll on that fateful day in Dallas. He also could do anything: creative accounting with the best of them, military aviation, expert marksmanship, portraiture, document forgery, and more. Is it all true? I don't know, but it is a fascinating read full of facts on crime and cop figures that could be verified with lots of photos and documents and appendices with two lengthy interviews and more that purport to support his role as an unwilling bit player in an American coup by scorned Mafia-CIA-AntiCastro forces that all had it in for Kennedy.



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Saturday, September 21, 2013

Review: Sound and Fury: Two Powerful Lives, One Fateful Friendship


Sound and Fury: Two Powerful Lives, One Fateful Friendship
Sound and Fury: Two Powerful Lives, One Fateful Friendship by Dave Kindred

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



In this dual biography, the largeness and significance of The Greatest eclipses that of commentator and fan Cosell. Ali's rush to join the military to be stopped by entry written tests and then refusal to be inducted later becomes one of the many acts of an Ali as marionette to Nation of Islam's Elijah Muhammed. This includes voluntarily withdrawing from fighting for a year and expressing trepidation that the assassination that befell Malcom X could happen to Ali if he, too, crossed Elijah. Also interesting is the intersections with organized crime. Did the mafia fix the Muhammad Ali vs Sonny Liston 1965 fight?



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Friday, September 13, 2013

Review: Street Player: My Chicago Story


Street Player: My Chicago Story
Street Player: My Chicago Story by Danny Seraphine

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Danny really delivers in this autobiography: The tale of his rise from Chicago gang thug to accomplished professional drummer makes a fascinating first act that leads to the globe-trotting, arena-filling years of Chicago's rule (alongsinde Blood, Sweat & Tears) of a rock bnad with horns and a jazz bent. The tragedies and excess and eventual ousting lead to the most personal third act: Seraphine along and struggling to find himself personally and professionally.



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Review: Aretha Franklin: The Queen of Soul


Aretha Franklin: The Queen of Soul
Aretha Franklin: The Queen of Soul by Mark Bego

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Author Bego highlights the questions of Aretha's life: Who fathered her first two children born in her teen years and why does she cancel so many appearances? Is it fear or money issues? Bego can only surmise and though he has had a lot of personal access with the subject, comes up with nothing really revealing. Record collectors will appreciate the recording and session details on every album and we can chuckle at the KFC and Wal-Mart obsessions of the house-bound, ecceentric suburban recluse Queen of Soul.



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Thursday, September 12, 2013

Review: Algebra for Symbolic Computation


Algebra for Symbolic Computation
Algebra for Symbolic Computation by Antonio Machì

My rating: 2 of 5 stars



...Rather than taking the reader somewhere even like CORDIC, the presentation is the expected corollaries of classical analysis. The result is a concisely presented range of classical results including Chinese remainder theorem, polynomial interpolation, p-adic expansions of rational and algebraic numbers, discrete Fourier transform, and more. There is a light amount of examples and exercises which would benefit from implementation details for software packages such as MATLAB or Maple.

[Look for my entire review in MAA Reviews]



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Monday, September 9, 2013

Review: Imperial Russia, 1801-1917


Imperial Russia, 1801-1917
Imperial Russia, 1801-1917 by Michael Karpovich

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



A quick study running from Peter the Great to Nicholas II. The assassination of the final czar and his family is omitted, possibly because this is a study aimed at high school students. Seeing it all condensed in less than one hundred pages (not counting bibliography and index), there appears a direct like from Alexander II's post-serfdom communes to the collectivist economy of Soviet Russia. Despite the target demographic, this is a good and concise history of the Russian nation under the czars.



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Sunday, September 8, 2013

Review: Freud and the Post-Freudians


Freud and the Post-Freudians
Freud and the Post-Freudians by J.A.C. Brown

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I really enjoyed this book much more than I expected. I am no Freudian or necessarily fan of his work before this. However, it did make me realize he was the first to approach the subject of personality and personality disorders scientifically. Before there was Freud, there was no analysis; no psychoanalysis. While it seems simplistic, now, Freud and his contemporary saw a homology to physiological processes. The break-through during analysis was seen like the ejection of foul material from a lanced boil. For the history, I was fascinated to learn the bevvy of “shell-shocked” WWI veterans that became raw material to try out Freudian and post-Freudian ideas on. In this rich market, I do not understand why Freud never developed a theory that did not require the impractical near-daily, multi-year bout of therapy. However, develop his theory he did, adding the ego and superego and getting away from the early focus on the infantile period, genitals, and toilet behavior. Apparently, his own reluctance to publish made it difficult for his own image to evolve.
On the infantile period, I did come to realize this must be important, like the import of the joke I heard Steven Wright tell: We all realize we’re going to die at some point, why is that moment never forgotten? In this work: “The baby hunger is a frightening situation…the very young child, with no more than a minimal appreciation of time , is unable to bear tension; he does not possess the knowledge, so consoling to older human beings, that loss, frustration, pain, and discomfort are usually but temporary and will be followed by relief.” (This in the text as if original to author J.A.C. Brown, but I see it is also in Dryden's Handbook of Individual Therapy and Man, Morals And Society: A Psycho-analytical Study by Flugel from 1945, so I don’t know who it is original to.)
Just as Freud changed over time, so do personality disorders, means the tools to treat them may need to change: “…most psychiatrists are increasingly interested in and puzzled by changing patterns of the neuroses, by the virtual disappearance of gross conversion hysteria and the corresponding increase of character disorders.
Some of all the constellation of symbolism which I long though simplistic and unbelievable is here directly assaulted: “Why, for example, should Rank and others insist that bowls and containers represent the enveloping womb when there is no other conceivable means of containing, and why should child analysts suppose a child pushing a train through a tunnel is simulating parental intercourse when … it seems obvious that … there are only two things a child could do with a train and tunnel – obligingly push the train or smash both of them.” And, even Jung gets his attacks: “…if Jung has read any modern science this is certainly not apparent in his works, which seem to take a leap from … schizophrenics or deteriorated elderly gentlemen and pass by way of the murky forests of Teutonic affairs straight into the arms of Indian and Chinese mysticism.”

I really liked the emphasis on an anthropological dimension where the lack of corresponding age-specific personality disorders in various, remote culture belie the innate psychic structure (pp. 188-9). Also, the implication to me is that we cannot understand what is innately, uniquely human without being able to separate what is sociological or cultural. That is, we may not be able to scientifically adjudge the psychic structure without using diverse cultures as a means test, a hypothesis test of what really resides in the mind of every man to be disordered. A lot of this makes me want to read Margaret Mead who is often quoted in these sections. “…creating personality boils down to the old problem: does the hen (culture) come from the egg (childhood situation) or the egg from the hen? Do people develop in a particular way because of what has happened to them in their childhood (psychoanalytic viewpoint)— or do parents behave in a particular way to their children because "society" or "culture" makes them do just those things (sociological viewpoint)? What happens if we assume the priority of the hen, i.e. of culture? This is what most anthropologists actually do. This view has been presented with certain modifications by Dr. Kardiner. The standpoint taken by this author (and many others) is that institutions confront the individual as external forces whatever their origin and as such they are responsible for molding and forming the personality of that individual. Dr. Kardiner believes that a human being in every society finds himself confronted by certain basic disciplines, a set of institutions to which he reacts in a certain way and in doing so becomes the author of another set of group phenomena. So this is really a compromise theory: half a hen lays an egg and from that egg we get the other half of the hen. But apart from this the crucial point is a very simple one. The basic disciplines (Kardiner) are what parents do to the children. Now if we can show that parental behavior is dependent on climate or in any other way on external conditions the theory might be helpful in explaining the ways of mankind. . But this is by no means the case. There are no environmental factors which make a Balinese mother behave in such a peculiarly cruel way to her children, so the sociological thesis cannot be reasonably maintained.” (Another Brown quote that shows in a 1945 work: Psychoanalysis Today)

It seemed these anthropological facts assailed orthodox Freudianism. “The Freudian assumption of the fixity of human nature began to fare badly in the 1930s when Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead produced a series of studies which demonstrated how very flexible human nature is when observed against different cultural backgrounds.”

My main belief bolstered here is that every human seeks safety, security, and self-control. Enabled, formed, or expressed methods to obtain these are disorders in often a sociological definition or context. Karen Horney seems to explore this reasoning a lot: “Horney saw the compulsive nature of neurotic drives in a quite different light… the neurotic’s overt drive for ‘love’, ‘power’, or ‘withdrawal’ is not really a drive for these things at all, but basically a search for security and freedom from anxiety. He does not want to give affection but needs to receive assurance that he will not be hurt, he does not want power… but in order to escape from anxiety produced by his feelings of inferiority. …neurotic drives are compulsive because they are motivated by anxiety.” This motion away from anxiety to security is a basic as the paramecium’s motion from darkness to light.

“From disagrees with these implications of Freudian theory, and bases his own theory on the two assumptions: (a) that the fundamental problem of psychology has nothing to do with the satisfaction or frustration of any instinct… but is rather that of the specific kind of relatedness of the individual to the world, and (b) that the relationship between man and society is constantly changing and is not, as Freud supposed, a static one.”

This all builds to an enlightening view of humanity: “Man, unlike any other creature, is aware of himself as a separate being, is able to store up the knowledge of the past in symbolic form and visualize the possibilities of the future, and by his imagination he can reach beyond the range of his senses… He is an anomaly, a ‘freak of the universe’” … now Brown begins quoting Fromm but I don’t think he always credits appropriately and clearly: “‘…part of nature, subject to her physical laws and unable to change them, yet he transcends the rest of nature. He is set apart while being a part; he is homeless, yet chained to the home he shares with all creatures. Cast into this world at an accidental place and time, he is forced out of it, again accidentally. Being aware of himself, he realizes his powerlessness and the limitations of his existence. He visualizes his own end: death. Never is he free from the dichotomy of his existence: he cannot rid himself of his mind, even if he should want to; he cannot rid himself of his body as long as he is alive—and his body makes him want to be alive.’”

I am still trying to understand am a bit awed by this conclusion: “Freud's work will make an even greater impact in the future when it is removed from the category of an expensive and prolonged method of treatment for a minute portion of the population carried out by practitioners who often have very little interest outside their own speciality and sometimes adopt a paranoid and contemptuous attitude towards the rest of the world… Psychoanalysis has so much to offer that it is absurd that it should be restricted in this way, and it is to the credit of the Americans, whether we agree with their conclusions or not, that they should have been the first to make the attempt to break down the barriers. For the explanation of the irrational is the special task of the twentieth century.” Have we done any better for our part in the 21st Century?




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Friday, September 6, 2013

Review: The War of the Worlds


The War of the Worlds
The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Two good introductions here in this edition: one biographical, one assessing the work. A final epilogue further assesses the work as seminal to the sci-fi genre.

"Yet across the gulf of space, minds that are to our minds as ours are to those of the beasts that perish, intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us.” Sublime. It is in such transcendant lines that Wells rises above the genre he spawed - so often poorly written as it is - to offer us literature. Another such passage concerns displaced refugees: "Never before in the history of the world had such a mass of human beings moved and suffered together. The legendary hosts of Goths and Huns, the hugest armies Asia has ever seen, would have been but a drop in that current. And this was no disciplined march; it was a stampede-a stampede gigantic and terrible-without order and without
a goal, six million people unarmed and unprovisioned, driving headlong. It was the beginning of the rout of civilisation, of the massacre of mankind." Something in this seems to presage the society-destroying tumult of World War II.

On that, a vivid passage recalls to me reports of the entrapment and miraculous/ad hoc Dunkirk rescue from Dunkirk: "For after the sailors could no longer come up the Thames, they came on to the Essex coast, to Harwich and Walton and Clacton, and afterwards to Foulness and Shoebury, to
bring off the people. They lay in a huge sickle-shaped curve that vanished into mist at last towards the Naze. Close inshore was a multitude of fishing smacks-English, Scotch, French,
Dutch, and Swedish; steam launches from the Thames, yachts, electric boats; and beyond were ships of large burden, a multitude of fflthy colliers, trim merchantnen, cattle ships, passenger boats, petroleum tanks, ocean tramps, an old white transport even, neat white and grey Iiners from Southampton and Hamburg; and along the blue coast across the Blackwater my brother could make out dimly a dense swarm of boats chaffering with the people on the beach..."

I've read this work before and on this reading I found it largely purged for me the few different movie treatments, each of which I have enjoyed multiple times. Enough of impenetrable force fields! I enjoy that the weakness of Martian technology is not explored for such human qualities of interest, charity, distraction, and horror. Life goes on while Martians march to London and the author comes across the signs of resilience and regrouping crawling out of the wreckage...

Also, the image of burning train and the lack of concern/responsiveness from the populace; that's in the book and while it seems awkward/inexplicable in the Cruise move treatment, now seems a Britishism ("Keep Calm and Carry On") visitation of the original.



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Thursday, September 5, 2013

Review: The Rescue of Bat 21


The Rescue of Bat 21
The Rescue of Bat 21 by Darrel D. Whitcomb

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



I decided to read the book after enjoying the Gene Hackman movie "Bat 21". The introduction clears up that this book came after and is to a great deal a response to that movie and the book it was based on. More thoroughly researched and able to divulge more details, this is a more commplete and accurate story of the late way SAR operation than the movie could have been. Yes, acronyms - there are a bundle in this work, seemingly touching every sentence in a work possibly geared at vets and other military pros. Fortunately, there is a glossary and an index to remind you where technology and operation code names were first mentioned and explained. Among the tech I never heard of before was the debilitating BLU-52 poison gas (seemingly in between tear and nerve varieties; very nasty stuff) and such things as WAAPM: "these weapons would release hundreds of bomblets that ... would not explode, but instead would extend trip wires, that when snagged by a person would explode" and other air bomblet "gravel". Wow! How did that work? Similary the air-dropped sensors and automatic guns along the persitent Ho Chi Min Trail.

The author makes an observation that some may want to apply to later excursions: "the story is also a warning about the dangers of alliances and pitfalls of coalition warfare in wars that are too drawn out, with objectives not clearly defined."

This book is also a lot about this, late period in the war when it was largely an air war of a withdrawing America and an invading North Vietname. A time when pilots had very little connection to the ground and the war at all, but the SAR missions were integral to morale: they kept would-be victims fighting and offered missions pilots and crews actually believed in.



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Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Review: The Butler: A Witness to History


The Butler: A Witness to History
The Butler: A Witness to History by Wil Haygood

My rating: 2 of 5 stars



It is a real treat to have the vocal performances of Forest Whitaker and Oprah Winfrey (Reading) in an audiobook. However, despite the promise of the subtitle "A Witness to History", this is not so much about the life of Eugene Allen, but rather the story of Wil Haygood meeting George and Helene Allen, researching the article eventually printed in the Washington Post, and the making of the movie eventually by Lee Daniels. Basically, we learn the movie is promising historical fiction, a bunch of cursory allusions to Allen's fascinating life, and how moved Haygood was by the personal meetings...

...in a way, it is so cursroy and discursive to almost feel like a money grab, like the "novelizations" that sometimes follow successful movies.



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Review: The Butler: A Witness to History


The Butler: A Witness to History
The Butler: A Witness to History by Wil Haygood

My rating: 2 of 5 stars



It is a real treat to have the vocal performances of Forest Whitaker and Oprah Winfrey (Reading) in an audiobook. However, despite the promise of the subtitle "A Witness to History", this is not so much about the life of Eugene Allen, but rather the story of Wil Haygood meeting George and Helene Allen, researching the article eventually printed in the Washington Post, and the making of the movie eventually by Lee Daniels. Basically, we learn the movie is promising historical fiction, a bunch of cursory allusions to Allen's fascinating life, and how moved Haygood was by the personal meetings...



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Monday, September 2, 2013

Review: The Post-American World 2.0


The Post-American World 2.0
The Post-American World 2.0 by Fareed Zakaria

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Anyone who watches Zakaria's GPS show will be familiar with the intelligent sober assessment of America's future, based on history and current events: It's not a decline of America, but a rise of the west, the future belongs to China & India, much of any American infirmity is internally caused and can be rectified. Among the themes stressed here are China's embracing of a developing world, especially Africa, while we look the other way and it continuing to raise millions from poverty and erect the greatest national infrastructure ever seen while we wallow in arguments over personal responsibility and tax management.

Among the most interesting, to me, is the comparison of how Britain lost its global hegemony from irresponsible foreign wars, starting with the Boer War, and otherwise stretched itself too thin relying on might and not cooperation.

As I expected, the work further convinces me that Zakaria is among the most intelligent commentators and analysts on cable news and I am glad he writes books as good as the ones he weekly recommends.



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Review: Symmetry


Symmetry
Symmetry by Ian Stewart

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Oxford's Very Short Introductions are concise introductions to a wide gamut of topics. Currently available titles cover advertising, Anglo-Saxons, British politics, the Dead Sea Scrolls, folk music, and “stars”. This entry into that intriguing list is a basic, even cursory, overview of the group theory underpinnings of symmetry. I imagine it breaks the stride of voracious VSI readers. A reading of online reviews proves that to be the case: “…not a beginner's book”, “…concepts difficult to follow”, “tough slogging”, and even “abandon all hope” are all common notions from readers.

Actually, Stewart supposes very little mathematical sophistication of the reader. Giving “the mathematical skeleton of the argument”, he reduces game theoretic analysis of rock-paper-scissors to a grocery list of logical facts. When matrix algebra is about to make a cameo in defining symmetry, Stewart casually remarks “we won’t go into that.”
...

[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]



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Review: King Lear

King Lear by William Shakespeare My rating: 4 of 5 stars View all my reviews