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04/10/2009 21:59:34
 
 
À
04/10/2009 19:19:49
Information générale
Forum:
Sports
Catégorie:
Olympiques
Titre:
Divers
Thread ID:
01426934
Message ID:
01427710
Vues:
56
He certainly got the main point right. That was one of the most influential books I ever read. Not only do things change, but the thing you can most rely on is that things will continue to change faster. I remember well his advice that mastering any particular set of skills is not important, since by time you learn them, they may become obsolete.

But if you want a skill set that will always be useful, get good at changing.

That was what, 1971? I had a degree in history and was running around the mountains in Laos. There were careers, experiences and bodies of knowledge ahead of me I couldn't imagine, even now cannot believe I did and which were definitely the result of a world changing very fast.

And at 62 I don't feel particularly frightened or dismayed at the idea that I spend half my day learning technology that changes as fast as I can learn it, and letting go of a programming language that made me a lot of money and in which I had a very comfortable reputation and set of skills.

Thanks, Alvin <bg> Best piece of advice anybody ever gave me. ( well, that, and sit on your kevlar when riding in helicopters <s>)


>I think I still have a copy of Alvin Toffler's Future Shock around somewhere. I should read it again to see if he got anything right.
>
>>Cold War Swap is quite good. Oliver Bleek stuff is hard to find - I am always searching used bookstores for the old paperbacks. ( I think I have them all now, but can never remember which ones I've loaned out or lost or am somehow missing so whenever i see one I buy it just one spec.
>>
>>
>>>I got Briarpatch and The Cold War Swap. When I'm starting with a new author, I like to read their stuff chronologically, although if it's not a "series" it really doesn't matter I suppose. So, Cold War Swap was his first book, but Briarpatch wasn't next chronologically ... maybe you mentioned it before in another post and that's why I got it.
>>>
>>>So, of your 5 favorites that you mentioned, 3 of them are available on Kindle: Missionary Stew, The Fools in Town, Out on the Rim. I just may have to try those samples too. <g>
>>>
>>>There aren't any Kindle versions available for Oliver Bleek.
>>>
>>>~~Bonnie
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>He won the Edgar for Briarpatch but my personal favorites include The Eighth Dwarf, Missionary Stew, The Fools in Town, Chinaman's Chance and Out on the Rim He also wrote under the name of Oliver Bleek and that stuff is terrific as well. Very character driven stuff. Absolutely no doubt the people are real ( we talked about that part of it - we shared a belief it doens't matter who done it - it matters that all the people are real. ) The last two on the list above feature Quincy Durant and Artie Woo. You won't find characters like them anywhere else in fiction - but they definitely exist.
>>>>
>>>>Which 2 samples did you get?
>>>>
>>>>>I downloaded samples of two of Ross Thomas's books to my Kindle (based on your previos comments about his writing), but haven't had the chance to read the samples yet. I'm sure I'll end up buying them.
>>>>>
>>>>>That would be cool if you'd publish your book(s) on Kindle. I didn't know that you could self-publish. That's pretty cool. I'd buy it!! ;0)
>>>>>
>>>>>~~Bonnie


Charles Hankey

Though a good deal is too strange to be believed, nothing is too strange to have happened.
- Thomas Hardy

Half the harm that is done in this world is due to people who want to feel important. They don't mean to do harm-- but the harm does not interest them. Or they do not see it, or they justify it because they are absorbed in the endless struggle to think well of themselves.

-- T. S. Eliot
Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for lunch.
Liberty is a well-armed sheep contesting the vote.
- Ben Franklin

Pardon him, Theodotus. He is a barbarian, and thinks that the customs of his tribe and island are the laws of nature.
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