|
Loading... The Code Book: The Secret History of Codes and Code-breaking
| |
| Tópicos | | mensagens | Última mensagem | | | 50 Book Challenge : christiguc's 2009 reading catalog | | 263 | christiguc, Domingo 11:36pm |  |
| Dewey Decimal Challenge : lorax jumps in | | 57 | sjmccreary, Dezembro 15 |  |
| 75 Books Challenge for 2009 : Mamachunk's 2009 Reading List | | 153 | alcottacre, Dezembro 5 |  |
| LC Classification Challenge : lorax's LoC challenge | | 39 | lorax, Novembro 3 |  |
| Fans of Russian authors : Who is your favorite Russian author and why? | | 45 | katewhite, Julho 24 |  |
| 75 Books Challenge for 2009 : Tigertwo's 75 Books for 2009 | | 25 | alcottacre, Abril 30 |  |
| 75 Books Challenge for 2009 : Kiwidoc- reading in 2009 | | 353 | Whisper1, Março 5 |  |
| Book Nudgers : Rullakartiina needs a nudge (Nov 24) | | 43 | theaelizabet, Dezembro 2008 |  |
| Non-Fiction Readers : October 2008: What non-fiction are you reading? | | 104 | SqueakyChu, Novembro 2008 |  |
| Book talk : Another Silly Game, Part 12 | | 358 | FAMeulstee, Setembro 2008 |  |
| Book Lust : Group Book Club- Let's pick book 1 | | 13 | librarygurl, Setembro 2008 |  |
| Mathematics : Math Popularisations... | | 37 | drbubbles, Agosto 2008 |  |
| The Green Dragon : What are you reading in July? | | 172 | SpicyCat, Agosto 2008 |  |
| What Are You Reading Now? : What Books Came Into Your Home Today? - #2: JULY. 2008 | | 231 | IaaS, Agosto 2008 |  |
| Reading Globally : Welcome & Group information | | 52 | lindsacl, Julho 2008 |  |
| Crime, Thriller & Mystery : Message Board | | 186 | RachelfromSarasota, Junho 2008 |  |
| Nabokov! : Message Board | | 31 | citygirl, Abril 2008 |  |
| Adormecido: Evolve! : Message Board | | 55 | jimroberts, Fevereiro 2008 |  |
| Adormecido: Historical Fiction : Any Elizabethan era reccomendations? | | 30 | wisewoman, Janeiro 2008 |  |
| Adormecido: 50 Book Challenge : Sandpiper - 50 books before my 40th Birthday | | 21 | sandpiper, Novembro 2007 |  |
| Adormecido: Dewey Decimal Challenge : nicole's 1000s challenge | | 3 | nperrin, Outubro 2007 |  |
| Adormecido: I Survived the Great Vowel Shift : Etymologists, Scots, Good Guessers: HELP! | | 11 | MMcM, Setembro 2007 |  |
| Adormecido: What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 28 Oct 2006 | | 119 | mrsradcliffe, Agosto 2007 |  |
| Adormecido: Non-Fiction Readers : What nonfiction are you reading now? | | 206 | 3Rs, Julho 2007 |  |
| Adormecido: Historical Fiction : Great modern reads set in the 19th century anywhere... | | 42 | avaland, Junho 2007 |  |
| Adormecido: ITCanon : kicking this off.... | | 3 | Busifer, Novembro 2006 |  |
... stay in good financial health. This too--I plan to implement. I highly recommend this book. He also has a website.
43) The Code Book: The Science of Secrecy From Ancient Egypt to Quantum Cryptography by: Simon Singh Excellent book! He chronicles the history of crytography. He also ... ...
641 Climbing the Mango Trees
643 Homes and Other Black Holes (added 10/12)
649 The Lesbian Parenting Book
652 The Code Book
660 Shrinking the Cat (added 7/6)
686 The TeXBook
Missing 100s:
670 Manufacturing
690 Buildings
... - well actually my son has read it as he is currently obsessed with this side of science (I am planning to read it).
The Code Book looks particularly interesting. ANOTHER TBR!!! and my resolution bites the dust!! ... no-one looking good at the end.
4. A Fortunate Life by A.B. Facey
Simply written and truly inspirational
5. The Code Book by Simon Singh
A fascinating history of codes and cryptography
6. Kissing Games of the World by Sandi Kahn Shelton
I read this as a reviewer ... ... I loved the story but it needed a good editor. Any book that mentions Bletchley Park, I buy... I also liked Simon Singh's The Code Book and Enigma by Robert Harris. Here's something about 2 books of your list in totally different genres:
I have read Simon Singh's The Code Book quite a few years ago, and would nudge it, but only if you fancy a demanding non-fiction book. Of course this is relative, depending on your grasp of mathematics.
I have not read West ... ... P.D: The Children of Men
Macchiavelli: The Prince
Orwell, George: 1984
Scalzi, John: Old Man's War
Singh, Simon: The Code Book
Solzenitsyn, Aleksandr: One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
Steinbeck, John: Tortilla Flat
Stephenson, Neal: Snow Crash
Undset, Kristin: Kristin ... >87
I also liked The Code Book. I've flipped through Simon Singh's Trick or Treatment at the library, but I haven't read it.
I'm currently between non-fiction reads. I need to decide which book to start tonight: The Wars of the Roses by Desmond Seward or The Ten-Cent Plague ... #48 LynnB,
Just finished The Code Book, and really liked it. Have you read any of the other Simon Singh books? I have read Big Bang: The Origin of the Universe and truly loved it. I will have to look for he other ones as well.
Regards,
Bill Masom #44, I really enjoyed The Code Book. It was interesting and I learned a few things. ... by Bruce Henderson today.
Bought 4 Non-Fiction books yesterday at Goodwill, so will probably read The Code Book by Simon Singh next, or They Met at Gettysburg by General Edward J. Stackpole, both which were in those purchased.
Bill Masom The code book: The science of secrecy from ancient Egypt to quantum cryptography by Simon Singh. Serious Grace suggested these books for September
Code Book
Diaries of Jane Somers
Far Side of Paradise, a biography ... ad
Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimimanda Ngozi Adichie
Bound for the Promised Land by Kate Clifford Larson
The Code Book by Simon Singh
The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde - audiobook
I'd Tell You I'd Love You, But then I'd Have to Kill You by Ally ... #103 - So, do you enjoy The Code book? I had a reading spree on crypto history some years ago and I remember that one as educational. After I read that one I could actually speak with the security hacks here at work without feeling flustered ;-) I'm still reading The Code Book (*not* the da Vinci Code, as the touchstone thought) and The Extraordinary and Unusual Adventures of Horatio Lyle, a lovely jf Victorian era-style mystery. I don't recall The Code Book having an algorithmic quality to it. I took a look at Amazon and one of the reviewers recommended books by Bruce Schneier, such as Applied Cryptography (and perhaps Practical Cryptography (Schneier wrote with Niels Ferguson)). ... down. Definitely one to re-read, and it's given me an urge to read code/cryptography books. I particularly fancy re-reading The Code Book by Simon Singh - but I have it in hardback, so it's a bit of a big one to carry around. Maybe I'll have that one on the go at home whilst I read a ... ... it's accessible to everyone. Personally, I also really like when math and history are mixed, so stuff similar to The Code Book (getting a bit into computers, but it definitely hits on a lot of number theory.). ... Harlot
TX (Home Economics) Hot Salty Sour Sweet
VK (Navigation, Merchant Marine) Seaworthy
Z (Books and Writing) The Code Book
Also, as reference books or textbooks but not read all the way through, I have
TS (Manufactures) Modern Optical Engineering
VM (Shipbuilding, Marine ... ... that go way over my head and still I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it to an interested high school-student. I also loved the code book by the same author, it's a great example of both applied linguistics and applied mathematics - and very entertaining to read too! As a teacher-to-be in both ... ... Genes, Peoples, and Languages
613 Promotion of health – Light on Yoga
652 Processes of written communication – The Code Book
741 Drawing & drawings – Pedigree Girls
746 Textile arts – The Urban Knitter
791 Public performances – The Piano
808 Rhetoric & ... I'm trying to learn the origin of the Scots word, scalch.
I came across it in Boswell's Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, so it was a common enough word there in 1773. Here is the passage, to give you a context:
It was past six o'clock when we arrived. Some excellent brandy ... I read The Code Book last year and really learned a lot.
I'm reading The World is Flat for a book club. It's easy to read and really brings globalization down to a personal level. ... of Desire by Michael Pollan. A very interesting book about the relationship between plants and people.
I am reading The Code Book by Simon Singh. A mixture of history, math and engineering. ... and mysteries among other things. Charming, but nothing to sink your teeth into. There is one I vaguely remember called the scots quaire but I don't remember the author. my library is in ny and i'm in fl. Also,John Buchan's the thirty-nine steps which was also an alfred hitchcock ... ...
Anyone have any views on Alison Weir's Mary Queen of Scots and the Murder of Lord Darnley and Antonia Fraser's Mary Queen of Scots? I have them TBR. I also enjoyed Mary by Janis Cooke Newman. ... edited by Mary Flanagan and maybe Crypto to the list. (Touchstones doesn't seem to work correctly...)
And probably Code Book as well. And maybe Battle of the Wits? It's hard to draw a straight line, sometimes :-)
As I'm in the UX-business, partly as an interaction designer, I would ... ... he just was a nice guy, who happened to a ridiculously talented writer. I've read Speak, Memory and Mashen'ka or Mary by Nabokov, and enjoyed both books very much. I'm hoping to start Lolita soon: what other books of his do you all recommend? Started Mary by Janis Cooke Newman last night. She will be doing an election day event at our public library so I had better get busy with the hefty volume of 707 pages Mary by Janis Cooke Newman (Mary Todd Lincoln) ... listed on the side in the touchstone though! The one by Nabokov! I've read more, including Pnin and just finished Mary (the one by Nabokov), and just finished King, Queen, Knave. I want to try to read the rest in order, as it is always interesting to see an author's evolution of ... ... Darwin by Ronald W. Clark (Clark also wrote an excellent biography of Einstein, Einstein: The Life and Times)
Evolution by Edward J. Larson
Life Itself: Its Origin and Nature by Francis Crick
Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters by Matt Ridley
... ... he's writing more and more with partners and 3 books a year? Is he still the one who writes them???
I'm presently reading Mary, Mary, the last in the Croos series, hoping it will be better than London Bridges...
|
Google Books — A carregar...
|