Seth Godin's Linchpin
Transition is my first Iain Banks novel and he, and the book, comes highly recommended by friends. Unfortunately I have to disagree with the praise. I like the writing style and lots of the ideas but the book failed to move me.
The book tells the story from the eyes of several different persons and weaves a story back and forth between different actors, times and places - indeed dimensions. Because of this its harder to read that most books that present with a clearer narrative and only a few viewpoints, the story is weaved together in the end but fails to impress. Somehow roughly the same story in fewer viewpoints could have been quite enjoyable but because of the several stories told from the eye of several main characters you never really feel connected to a central protagonist and left not really caring what happens. The battle to stop the evil machinations fails to feel important and I ended up reading through the whole book, waiting for it to start. What leaves me perplexed is that the book is just the type of book that I could've and should've liked - the theme and lots of the ideas in it are just the kind of things I find enjoyable and there's nothing wrong the writing either. But somehow because of the discontinuity of the story and lack of reason to find the actions of the protagonists important, or like-able, it just fell flat to me. I will, however, give the author another chance since several of my friends like him. In my pile of recently purchased books is Iain M Banks "The Player of Games" which sounds promising, hoping to like that one more and perhaps yet become a fan of mr. Banks.
My grandfather is the kindest, gentlest and most humble person you'll find. He has worked hard all his life and never once complained. I now know why...
"Så länge jag minns" means "As long as I remember" and is my grandfather, Ole Hagnäs', story from when he was called upon to protect his country in 1942, at just 18 years of age, until the end of the war. Our country owes so much to him and his generation, they made the greatest of sacrifices for our freedom and asked for nothing but peace in return.
Ole, "Faffa" as we grandchildren call him, never talked about his experiences in the war. This book is for all of us the heart-wrenching explanation as to why he doesn't want to talk about it - it describes events no one should be force to witness and the feeling of helplessness over what is happening around him. War is hell and there are very few heroes, mostly just young men dying. Writing this book caused many sleepless nights for Ole as he was forced to remember things he spent over 60 years forgetting, yet we are all so happy he wrote it down so it will never be forgotten. The book is written in the clear and simple swedish of an uneducated but thoughtful man and doesn't pretend to be anything but the personal memories and recollections of a simple infantryman. Obviously it has personal significance for me as the several close calls with death that Ole had show me how lucky I am to even exist! While I am hopelessly biased towards the book, it has been my most emotional reading experience ever, I also think that the book will be an interesting read for people that have grandparents with similar experiences or just wants to read a very personal account of the war from a simple infantryman's viewpoint. There are enough history-books and biographies of the leaders and heroes - this is from and about the people who actually fought the war and dug the trenches.
P.s.. The book should be on sale at "Luckan" at the Kokkola Library soon or if you are further away I can arrange a copy for you, price is 25 euros.
The big battle this year in mobile will be in smartphones. Not because of reasons many pundits and analysts now suggest, that somehow this is that everybody caught the iPhone fever or that Google somehow energized the field with its Nexus phone. No, those are overhyped views with an overly US-centric view. Remember that differing from most high tech and media industries like computers, TVs, air travel, advertising, military spending, music, movies, rocket science etc, where the US tends to reflect about half of global spending of the given industry. That is not so in mobile telecoms. US cellphone users (about 285 million subscriptions) represent only 7% of the global subscriber base of 4.6 Billion.
Also by Tomi Ahonen, an excellent write-up on what to expect from 2010 in regards to mobile phones and the companies that build them.
Excellent presentation by Tomi Ahonen about the state of mobile usage and where it is going. Eye-opener especially for those staring themselves blind on how mobile phones are used in the western world.
I don't do New Years resolutions because they hardly ever work and if they are good ideas you should start these projects when you get the idea and are in the mood. That said, if I made a resolution it would be to read less news and more facts this year. I actually began this project last year.
I used to have this link in my browser that opened up a massive list of different news-sites, based on the theory that if I read the news from enough sources I'd filter out some kind of objective truth about what is happening in the world. Of course this isn't what happens, most news comes from the same source anyway - the news site is just an aggregator nowadays so you should choose the one you feel will point out the news that is important to you. News are also sensational in nature so even if you know what events have occurred you won't get the whole story and no one bothers to get back to you if they are wrong or new information comes up. Last summer, after a friend of mine extolled the virtues of "The Economist" I bought a couple of issues from the newsstand and took the time to read each issue, realizing that this was the kind of news I wanted. I wanted intelligent and non-sensational reporting about important issues but also with analysis and background. I'm now a subscriber and read every issue with care - usually it takes most of the week. That doesn't matter because the news is old anyway, the news has been chosen to be relevant even 1-2 weeks later and comes with the aforementioned analysis and background it needs. I still want to know if something important has happened, and because of this I still read a few sites every day. I go the Helsingin Sanomat ( http://www.hs.fi ) which is our countries largest newspaper, they have a great website and good reporting. There I get finnish news and some of the most important international ones. I also skim either New York Times' website ( http://global.nytimes.com ) and/or the BBC News page ( http://news.bbc.co.uk ) for more international news. Last I go to TechMeme ( http://www.techmeme.com ) which collects the latest rumors and information in the tech and Internet-industry - mostly because that is one of my fields of interest. That's a lot less than the nine (9!) sites that I used to skim/peruse before (BBC, HBL, Google News, NYT, Techmeme, Yle, HS, Der Spiegel and Reddit). I read the news sites by skimming instead of actually reading very many articles. Yes, I am a recovering procrastinator and information addict... I have a few additional news flows too, I follow several twitter-feeds for both breaking news and news that become old faster or isn't important if I'm busy. I'm trying to cut down on those too because it's too easy to procrastinate and find some weird little tidbit fascinating when you should be doing something more important. Like study, or clean up your desk - like I had planned to today...
James Randi, the Amazing Randi, magician and skeptic has recently been through a 6 month chemotherapy-treatment and would like to tell you that medicine does, in fact, improve and that chemotherapy isn't the bogeyman that it used to be. This is great news and good advice against other uninformed sources that might have you believe differently. Modern medicine works and continues to improve and I hope we will keep seeing Randi as active as ever for a long time to come!