HackerNews Readings
40,000 HackerNews book recommendations identified using NLP and deep learning

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Life After Google: The Fall of Big Data and the Rise of the Blockchain Economy

George Gilder

4.3 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Blockchain Revolution: How the Technology Behind Bitcoin Is Changing Money, Business, and the World

Don Tapscott, Alex Tapscott, et al.

4.2 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Launch: An Internet Millionaire's Secret Formula To Sell Almost Anything Online, Build A Business You Love, And Live The Life Of Your Dreams

Jeff Walker

4.5 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Bitcoin and Cryptocurrency Technologies: A Comprehensive Introduction

Arvind Narayanan, Joseph Bonneau, et al.

4.5 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Head First Python: A Brain-Friendly Guide

Paul Barry

4.5 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Advances in Financial Machine Learning

Marcos Lopez de Prado

4.5 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Learn Python 3 the Hard Way: A Very Simple Introduction to the Terrifyingly Beautiful World of Computers and Code (Zed Shaw's Hard Way Series)

Zed Shaw

4.4 on Amazon

4 HN comments

The Elder Scrolls: The Official Cookbook

Chelsea Monroe-Cassel

4.9 on Amazon

4 HN comments

This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends: The Cyberweapons Arms Race

Nicole Perlroth

4.6 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Team Topologies: Organizing Business and Technology Teams for Fast Flow

Matthew Skelton , Manuel Pais , et al.

4.6 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Designing Interfaces: Patterns for Effective Interaction Design

Jenifer Tidwell , Charles Brewer , et al.

4.5 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Personal Kanban: Mapping Work | Navigating Life

Jim Benson and Tonianne DeMaria Barry

4.3 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars: An Introductory Programming Manual

Anonymous

4.5 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Effective C: An Introduction to Professional C Programming

Robert C. Seacord

4.5 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Fanatical Prospecting: The Ultimate Guide to Opening Sales Conversations and Filling the Pipeline by Leveraging Social Selling, Telephone, Email, Text, and Cold Calling (Jeb Blount)

Jeb Blount and Mike Weinberg

4.7 on Amazon

3 HN comments

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eiponSep 7, 2017

> more tax revenue = better services for the citizens

Lol.

"When the government is able to collect tax and seize private property without just compensation, it is an indication that the public is ripe for surrender and is consenting to enslavement and legal encroachment. A good and easily quantified indicator of harvest time is the number of public citizens who pay income tax despite an obvious lack of reciprocal or honest service from the government."

--Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars

carapaceonJune 11, 2019

Economics is basically numerology. A true science of economics could be described as "ecology + psychology", and would be based in physics.

The closest thing I've ever seen to a proper economics is the "Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars" document. (It's chapter one of Bill Cooper's infamous book "Behold a Pale Horse". I want to make it clear, FWIW, that I never read the rest of the book. I have less-than-zero to say about the content of the rest of the book.)

Oh look, it's online and with diagrams now: https://lawfulpath.com/ref/sw4qw/index.shtml Bitchin'.

It's pretty creepy: it's a combination of an exposition on a simple electrical model of economics with a nightmarish gloss of crypto-fascism (or something, I'm not sure what you'd call it.)

Anyhow, the "electro-economics" is what I want to call HN readers' attentions to: something like that is what I would expect economics to look like. (Without the creep Dr. Evil vibe.)

truthhurtsonJan 25, 2013

"It is patently impossible to discuss social engineering or the automation of a society, i.e., the engineering of social automation systems (silent weapons) on a national or worldwide scale without implying extensive objectives of social control and destruction of human life, i.e., slavery and genocide."

--Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars

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