nanila: the gracious multiracial nellie kim salutes you (nellie salutes you)
Mad Scientess ([personal profile] nanila) wrote in [community profile] bitesizedreading2015-04-26 09:35 pm
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Daily Reading (26 April 2015)

What have you been reading today? Everything counts, from a novel-length fic to the labels on your washing!
quoththeravyn: El Greco style Don Quixote pic from xkcd.com (Default)

Snippets of stuff

[personal profile] quoththeravyn 2015-04-27 01:43 am (UTC)(link)
Got to browsing in my work in progress folder, looking for something in particular. For years now I've been writing prompts for a half hour every Sunday, and my there's stuff in here... funky alternate universes for a story that's already full of funky alternate universe stuff.

[personal profile] thamesynne 2015-04-27 08:37 am (UTC)(link)
Most notably: a personal history of various ancient computers, particularly the English Electric KDF9, by Bill Findlay. I'm always struck by how far ahead of the curve the British have always been with computer architecture, yet how little we've capitalised on it.

[personal profile] thamesynne 2015-04-28 12:51 am (UTC)(link)
Ooh, I'll have to look out for that. And that reminds me, in turn, of two more books - Simon Lavington's "Early British Computers", which I first read when I was still at school and found it in my local library, although it's a little on the perfunctorily technical side; and Tracy Kidder's "The Soul of a New Machine", which described the same kind of temporary unification of creative talent, and similarly made me feel sad when it fell apart.
weaverbird: (Books)

[personal profile] weaverbird 2015-04-27 11:01 am (UTC)(link)
The everyday baseline stuff (Twitter, LJ, DW, 5 min of bedtime reading) plus a review of the 3-wheel Morgan car (technically a motorcycle, apparently), browsed snippets of various novels on Project Gutenberg, skimmed a couple Guardian articles.
weaverbird: (Bollard)

[personal profile] weaverbird 2015-04-27 07:38 pm (UTC)(link)
These daily posts have made me realize the same thing - I read many things on a daily basis almost without registering it, if you see what I mean.