More Content

in idex •  7 years ago 

Yes, this is more content, but also I would like to produce, generally, more content on Steem. It's good to have a blog where I can post Joycesque stream of consciousness posts, especially since my consciousness is painfully self-aware.

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It isn't this bad, yet.

I will continue looking for 10x gems on Idex.market. I will post more reviews of whitepapers and what pitiful attempts I make at going through code on github, reading books on programming and on trading, and erping more about Dark Souls builds. If talking to a high IQ autist with a law degree is on your list of things to do, we can make that happen.

If anyone has any requests, I'd love to review a whitepaper with other people - not for you - as a discussion-styled livestream. Since Steem integrates with dlive, I'll probably do it there. People can dismiss dlive all they wish as a streaming platform, but I'd rather eat raw eggs still in their shells than spend another minute on twitch, youtube, stream.me, hitbox, etc. None of these places allow me true and proper free expression of my ideas. They might allow free expression out of indifference, but that rings hollow to me.

Communities have always been difficult for me. Having spent so much time in my own head, relating to other people is a challenge. The few friends I have ever made are all held in the highest of regard and esteem. It would be arrogant to hope that I meet more friends through cryptocurrencies, and arrogance is one of my better traits.

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I wouldn't mind a (br)icriulashonhara approved reading list. I love to pretend that I'm going to read books other than science fiction, so it'd be great to find a few more ebooks to clog up my kobo.

ebooks on publica????????????

Well, after you've read everything by Jules Verne, Isaac Asimov, and Karel Capek, you are essentially done with science fiction. They have started calling it Speculative Fiction for some reason. I think Margaret Atwood started that, but she's an untalented dork and an irrelevant shitter who locked her last book away in that dumb 100 year vault so I cannot even deride it until I'm 125.

Right now I have Blackhat Python, Reversing: The Science of Reverse Engineering, Malware Analyst's Cookbook and DVD, etc. in ascending difficulty by my desk. The next stack is Days of Rage, A Civil Action, A Random Walk Down Wallstreet, and Thinking, Fast and Slow. The next stack is some stuff for trading - Murphy - and a bunch of stuff on environmental law and forensics.

But now that you brought up Sci Fi, some Jules Verne books might just, hehe, fall off the shelf. If you know what I mean.
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