HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

minnca

no profile record

Submissions

Using an LLM to revamp my site

devinlogan.org
1 points·by minnca·السنة الماضية·0 comments

Homeownership Changes You

theatlantic.com
2 points·by minnca·قبل 4 سنوات·0 comments

[untitled]

14 points·by minnca·قبل 4 سنوات·0 comments

Urban sprawl and car dependence – some thoughts on solutions

idratherbewriting.com
1 points·by minnca·قبل 5 سنوات·1 comments

How to care less about work

theatlantic.com
8 points·by minnca·قبل 5 سنوات·0 comments

The Final Frontier of the Text Inbox

annehelen.substack.com
2 points·by minnca·قبل 5 سنوات·0 comments

The Myth of the Productive Commute

annehelen.substack.com
1 points·by minnca·قبل 5 سنوات·0 comments

The Hitchhiker's Guide to Kotlin

nathan-contino.github.io
93 points·by minnca·قبل 5 سنوات·33 comments

Ebooks Are an Abomination

theatlantic.com
4 points·by minnca·قبل 5 سنوات·0 comments

comments

minnca
·قبل 5 سنوات·discuss
This is how you lose the time war is unlike any other book I've read! I thought it was super disorienting – and I loved that.
minnca
·قبل 5 سنوات·discuss
Ken Liu has some excellent short stories. His collection The Paper Menagerie from a few years ago was particularly great. (The titular short story won a Hugo.) He also translated the first and third books in the Three-Body Problem series.

Ted Chiang is another great SF short story writer.

Definitely Maybe by the Strugatsky brother is excellent – though it was published in the 70s so maybe not "modern."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Definitely_Maybe_(novel)
minnca
·قبل 5 سنوات·discuss
I think The Beginning Place is an underrated Le Guin book that didn't make the list! It's definitely not science fiction or even futuristic – more like fantasy plus magical realism – but I found the plot so unique and engaging.
minnca
·قبل 5 سنوات·discuss
I'm a big Le Guin fan and I consider her books to be sort of like "anthropological science fiction," as in they're focused on the societies and people of science fictional societies and less so on the science behind those societies.