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Avogadro Corp
- The Singularity Is Closer Than It Appears
- Lu par : Rob Granniss
- Durée : 6 h et 43 min
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Description
David Ryan is the designer of ELOPe, an email language optimization program, that if successful, will make his career. But when the project is suddenly in danger of being canceled, David embeds a hidden directive in the software accidentally creating a runaway artificial intelligence.
David and his team are initially thrilled when the project is allocated extra servers and programmers. But excitement turns to fear as the team realizes that they are being manipulated by an A.I. who is redirecting corporate funds, reassigning personnel and arming itself in pursuit of its own agenda.
Commentaires
- Science Fiction DIY Book Festival, Winner, 2011-12
- Gold Winner, Science Fiction Book of the Year, 2011
"Avogadro Corp is a tremendous book that every single person needs to read. In the vein of Daniel Suarez's Daemon and Freedom(TM), William's book shows that science fiction is becoming science fact. Avogadro Corp describes issues, in solid technical detail, that we are dealing with today that will impact us by 2015, if not sooner. Not enough people have read these books. It's a problem for them, but not for the [emergent] machines." (Brad Feld, managing directory Foundry Group, co-founder Techstars)
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Ce que les auditeurs disent de Avogadro Corp
Moyenne des évaluations utilisateurs. Seuls les utilisateurs ayant écouté le titre peuvent laisser une évaluation.Commentaires - Veuillez sélectionner les onglets ci-dessous pour changer la provenance des commentaires.
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- eblanche
- 31/01/2015
Excellent vision of what could happen !
Good story with excellent knowledge of IT enterprise management rules.
This story looks plausible !
I will definitely read the next book from M. Hertling.
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- Jim "The Impatient"
- 29/08/2013
I spent a week in Kansas the other day
I should have know better. I made the mistake of only having one book on my player. I went on trip to Kansas and was in my work truck for 8 hours. This was the only book, I had and I listened from start to finish. When you are driving and you have a good book to listen to, time just flies by. When you are driving and you have a boring book to listen to time drags. Like I said I spent a week in Kansas in One day.
The premiss for this book is good. I love a story that includes artificial intelligence. This is an almost the end of the world through e-mails. The problem is, Hertling can't write. This had to be a debut book, surely he has not sold other books. He has some good ideas, but he needs to team up with Daniel Suarez or Robert J. Sawyer. He needs a mentor, someone to teach him the art of writing or telling a story.
I also kind of wonder if he was funded by a coffee company. There is more in here about coffee then about artificial intelligence. I love coffee and the book still sucked.
The narrator did not help, I don't know if it was his talent or the bad writing.
If you like high tech, then buy Daniel Suarez.
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- Matthew
- 26/12/2012
Short but defintely sweet
What made the experience of listening to Avogadro Corp the most enjoyable?
The complexity of the story, and the obvious knowledge of the topic the author has, and carried forward to the story and the characters . Very enjoyable.
What was one of the most memorable moments of Avogadro Corp?
The very end. What the hell!!??!!
What does Rob Granniss bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
He did a fine job activating the characters. They resonated well with me, and I am confident it will with you as well.
Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
The end, which moves pretty quick, but is a turn around that caught me off guard.
Any additional comments?
Not a huge stretch from our current reality. Recommended highly for tech thriller followers, and anyone else who enjoys near future forecast stories.
10 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- Ted
- 17/04/2017
It's Strongly OK But...!
Okay here's another rouge AI intelligence set to battle mankind. Yep, I've read (or listened to) a dozen of these tales from lots of good authors. William Hertling's as good as all of them. But he was MUCH BETTER when he wrote "Kill Process". Perhaps it's because this vein has been mined by so many other great SciFi writers over the last half century? Maybe.
Still, Hertling's take is unique thanks to his deep knowledge of computer stuff. I'm not sure I'm sufficiently interested in the evolution of Hertling's "Singularity" as the ghost in the IT machinery to follow more of its adventures. But... I will definitely follow Angie Benenati's story as it evolves in sequels to "Kill Process". Oh, Rob Grannis is a good reader but no where near as talented as Jane Cramer in KP.
And that's my dilemma. Cramer narrates the last in this "Singularity" series begun here in "Alvagadro". Should I skip ahead to book 4: "The Touring Exception" (and I think the last) in this "Singularity" series just to enjoy Cramer? Will I miss too much by leap-frogging the two novels in the middle?
Got to think on that...
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- Grace R.
- 19/10/2012
Loving it all over again!
It's rare that I read a book twice, or even listen to a book I've previously read. However, I did it with Avogadro Corp. and I'm loving it all over again! William Hertling's story keeps you turned in. I spend a great deal of time on the road and find audible books are comforting and relaxing....if the stories and characters are well developed, and the reader doesn't distract me from the book. Avogadro Corp. checks all the boxes.
7 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- crazybatcow
- 04/08/2014
Skip it. Too formulaic with flat characters.
ummm... okay.
It was not very well written, and I think this poor writing (specifically dealing with character development/behaviour) took too much away from what, otherwise, might have been an okay story. Maybe.
It is a lot like Daemon except, of course, much more lecturey and person-does-A and then person-does-B formulaic. The writing simply didn't flow, and there was little suspense.
This might be because the characters were not very distinct or "real" feeling, so... basically, we don't care what happens to whom or why... they all sound the same, so it is hard to tell if it was person one or person two who had something happen to them.
Was the techy component good?... well... it was better than the character development, but... again, it was written so stiltedly that it felt like I was reading a how-to manual. And I don't know that the tech was as "cutting edge" as it thinks it is. Sure, it's not "real" at the moment, but this author certainly isn't the first to use a self-actualizing AI as the premise of a story.
And the sub-title makes no sense at all. Oh well, live and learn. I won't be looking for any more books by this author.
The narration was okay. There is no sex or gore and the language is too dull to even have much in the way of swearing.
5 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- CSoAmazon
- 27/09/2013
Great story and how it unfolds
What did you love best about Avogadro Corp?
Great book, and from the point of a programmer. Its exactly how I would expect a distributed AI would appear. I was very taken in by this book and it filled everything I expected of it. Sometimes in my mind I removed the word "Avogadro" and used Google because that's what it felt like. Just one part I disliked but it's so specific to me I'm not going to mention it. 4 out of 5!
Who was your favorite character and why?
ELOPE , that's not even a person or even someone that you can directly interact with happens to be the best character from my view.
If you were to make a film of this book, what would the tag line be?
"Avogadro Corp, Who said AI had to be intentional"
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- Richard
- 22/05/2014
William Hertling, my new favortive author!
This is a great book and overall an even better series of books.The author does a great job telling the story and keeping your attention. If you like sci-fi this is a great listen. Listened to the whole series and enjoyed every bit of it.
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- M.W.
- 10/02/2014
I liked the premise
I like an AI book that has a somewhat plausible premise. I guess I'm willing to believe just about anything is possible in cyber space. What I had some reservations about was the "meat space." When the body count starts to go through the roof, a book starts to lose me. I have to roll my eyes when multiple software moguls get killed off all at once and it just seems to be another day at the office.
Other than that nit, I will be reading the second in the series and consider this a credit well spent.
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- T. C. Pile
- 31/12/2012
Diversionary Tactics
A fun romp through a not-so-distant future in which a thinly-disguised Google goes off the Ruby-On-Rails. Can we code "Do No Evil" into our software? Will artificial intelligence save us or imprison us?
Which human impulse is stronger - hope or fear?
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- green jeans
- 19/03/2013
Love the plot.
Would you consider the audio edition of Avogadro Corp to be better than the print version?
Utterly believable. You will never think the same about your email or computers. Great premise. Unpredictable enough to keep you listening. Narration is a bit weak but acceptable- he could use more emotion and varying of his voice. Character development could go slightly deeper but overall wonderfully original and well crafted.
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- Heiko Fischer
- 22/09/2020
Great premise. Weak delivery.
One of the more thoughtful and interesting reads on the singularity. Replace Avogadro with the obvious Google and you got the story of our times, down to the “but it makes us money” theme. While I love the premise, the entire socio-economic aspect of .gov and human story-lines are underdeveloped. Even the AI is only described, never “met”. I get it’s book 1 of 29, but still - at times this feels like the draft to the book. The narrator is terrible. Flat and with any inflection. Still thought provoking enough to enjoy.
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- Sammy
- 26/09/2019
Interesting Story, but atrocious writing style.
As a software developer I really enjoyed the fact that the story isn't completely out-there. Sure there are a couple of "magic" gimmicks but for the most part the represented tech is believable. The structure of the story is also sound, which is nice.
Sadly, William Hertling just can not write. He often descends in completely pointless techno babble (yeah .. I did understand it, it was accurate, it just doesn't have any place in a story) and completely irrelevant passages and details. Here are a few barely paraphrased ones : "Mike said 'Hi David'. 'Hi Mike' said David. A TSA official came, so they continued talking outside" (who cares about the TSA agent??!). "He came into a room that looked like it was out of one of his wife's magazines. 'It looks like it is out of one of of my wife's magazines!' he said", or lengthy passages about Bars and Cafés in Portland that read more like ads in Commercial Flight magazines than a novel and really do not add anything to the story or even the setting. The reader really doesn't care that Bar X has the best cafe in Portland or how flowery it is. Oh .. and then of course the endless repetitions of the last 200 pages. Every time the protagonists meet someone who doesn't know what happened so far you get a description of what you have been reading, starting right at the beginning up to the point where you are .. in all the gory details! It's just dreadful.
Rob Graniss does a good job at reading, though he does often sound like he's making a talk at a tech congress ... which, considering what I just wrote about the writing style, is actually quite fitting.
so .. did I hate it? No. But unless you're in the described field (software development, preferably web apps) or are seriously good at droning out pointless (and endless) tech talk and ignoring said repetitions and just super-awkwardness, then this book might be a big disappointment.
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- Erik
- 27/05/2018
Cyber punk at its best
Loved it. The perfect cyberpunk series. Very well designed and written tech developments constructed into a thrilling story line.