I’d second all three.
Neil Gaiman is absolutely one of my favorite authors and from what I’ve seen, a pretty great human being as well.
I’d second all three.
Neil Gaiman is absolutely one of my favorite authors and from what I’ve seen, a pretty great human being as well.
I loved Orson Scott Card’s books when I was younger, even the later Ender books. Unfortunately he’s also a pretty terrible person much like Rowling.
One of my favorite managers once told me while I was struggling with a severe case of imposter syndrome “if you’re faking it well enough that others can’t tell, you might not be faking it as much as you think.”
The science of spice https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/38085725
And a gift card for a spice shop.
Thanks for letting me know. I was able to pull out the proper link from the mess and edited my post. Please try it again and let me know.
(For ease of reference) https://epc2020.eaps.nl/uploads/201146
If anyone is interested in the actual study, I believe this is it. Only had time to give it a real quick skim. Sorry for the nasty Google link.
Edit to fix link. https://epc2020.eaps.nl/uploads/201146
I used to do penetration testing and only got to dabble in physical penetration testing a couple of times. Hell of a lot of fun.
For anyone reading this chain and interested in hearing more, this is a pretty fun interview with someone known for doing physical presentation testing.
Old joke that’s been around forever: “What’s the best way to generate a random string? Give a first year comp sci student an open vim editor”
One of the best bosses I ever had once told me that people will stay for the culture but leave for money. His philosophy was to try and ensure that money was not a factor in people’s decision, then build as good a culture as he could.
And to be clear, by making money not a factor, I mean he paid well.
Absolutely. Anansi boys is my personal favorite of his, but I think highly of all his books.