A salient reminder that if you look closely at any company, no matter how special and hyped they are, you will just find the same kinds of exploitation, greed and ego. Sam Altman is not going to bring about AGI, OpenAI is not going to make money obsolete and AI is not going to solve climate change, it's all just one compelling narrative told by a particularly good storyteller.
A salient reminder that if you look closely at any company, no matter how special and hyped they are, you will just find the same kinds of exploitation, greed and ego. Sam Altman is not going to bring about AGI, OpenAI is not going to make money obsolete and AI is not going to solve climate change, it's all just one compelling narrative told by a particularly good storyteller.
The setup of Hill House as an antagonistic force is so compelling that the events end up feeling restrained and slightly underwhelming.
I love the idea of a house that has been built (or has morphed) to be disorientating. Lulling it's inhabitants into a literal false sense of security. I suspect that The Devil in the White City will make for a good companion piece in this regard.
The setup of Hill House as an antagonistic force is so compelling that the events end up feeling restrained and slightly underwhelming.
I love the idea of a house that has been built (or has morphed) to be disorientating. Lulling it's inhabitants into a literal false sense of security. I suspect that The Devil in the White City will make for a good companion piece in this regard.
Does a good job of covering the various reasons why the current approach to drugs is failing. None of it feels particularly surprising almost 10 years later but it's worth a refresher on why these policies fail on economic as well as moral grounds.
What would have elevated this analysis for me would be to further probe into the way in which the War on Drugs is driven by political interests outside of just protecting society from dangerous drugs. It's a cruel policy and the cruelty is partly the point here as it's useful to have a militarised border that separates more impoverished nations (amongst other benefits). A sensible book with sensible suggestions but nothing more than that.
Does a good job of covering the various reasons why the current approach to drugs is failing. None of it feels particularly surprising almost 10 years later but it's worth a refresher on why these policies fail on economic as well as moral grounds.
What would have elevated this analysis for me would be to further probe into the way in which the War on Drugs is driven by political interests outside of just protecting society from dangerous drugs. It's a cruel policy and the cruelty is partly the point here as it's useful to have a militarised border that separates more impoverished nations (amongst other benefits). A sensible book with sensible suggestions but nothing more than that.
The characters are just as well drawn as the previous two but the plot is significantly weaker.
I missed the investigative aspect and having an outcome to root for. There are too many despicable people and not enough "good guys" with agency. The writing has a momentum that had me engaged throughout but I left feeling like there was an opportunity lost and that the strengths of the first two books were diminished in the pursuit of a tidy ending.
The characters are just as well drawn as the previous two but the plot is significantly weaker.
I missed the investigative aspect and having an outcome to root for. There are too many despicable people and not enough "good guys" with agency. The writing has a momentum that had me engaged throughout but I left feeling like there was an opportunity lost and that the strengths of the first two books were diminished in the pursuit of a tidy ending.