Monday, February 27, 2017

Miss Peregrin's home for peculiar children

This exciting fantasy story is composed based on a collection of old photographs obtained from flea markets and friends. Pretty creative approach and so is the story. Interesting is also that this is the debut book by the author Ransom Riggs.

This is very entertaining and exciting reading about these peculiar children - and so very well written, I am not surprised at all that one of my favourite film directors, Tim Burton, found this story so exciting that he decided to make a full feature motion picture based on this book.
Better credit to any debut author and the story is hard to get if one appreciates Tim Burton movies like Beetlejuice, Nigthmare before Cristmas (stop motion movie), Edward Scissorhands, Batman, Sleepy Hollow, Mars Attacks, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Corpse Bride (also stop motion movie) and lately Alice Through the Looking Glass - and many more, but now also Miss Peregrine's home for Peculiar Children.
I actually enjoyed Tim Burton's movie before I read the book, but I realise that you can actually enjoy both in either sequence as Tim Burton has invented his own climax of the story, but still very true to the characters in the book as well as their capabilities.

Enjoy!!!

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Conclave

Robert Harris' Conclave is a bit of a chameleon, its not necessarily what you expect when you pickup the book from the bookstore or library - at least it was not to me, especially because Robert Harris is being presented as one of the thriller authors of our time etc. 

This is  not at all to his or his book "conclave" discredit, its just that it may set some expectations that may not be fulfilled. I started to read this book with the expectation of a thriller, well it all depends on what each one us defines as a thriller, but if I tell you that this book is all about cardinals holding a conclave to elect a new pope in the Vatican - and thats pretty much it, I guess I will discourage lots of readers - unfairly!! Unfairly because this is a very well written story, the research done is exceptionally good and the result is definitely one of the best books I have read for a very long time - despite it is only about a bunch cardinals in gigantic segregated holy place called the Vatican... which would normally not catch my interest, but this story made me love the main characters, the secrecy and the close companionship between the men... and one or two women.. Given the context of the story one would need some surprises and cliff hangers to keep the interest. Robert Harris is not necessarily such a big cliff hanger master, but he does not need to because his story telling is an all cliff hanger story telling with just the right amount of surprises all the way till the last page... so, great book, great reading!!


Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Hybrid Cloud 2.0


Almost two years ago Gartner and other analysts and market research companies predicted that nearly half of large enterprises will have hybrid cloud deployments by the end of 2017 – that's just two years from now (and it did not happen - note of Sept 2020). 

Only a year ago, the interest of a hybrid cloud solution was still very high: 
So, will it happen? Well it all depends on how we define hybrid cloud. Installing a cloud orchestrator may very well account for a hybrid cloud deployment – for some, and in that perspective I am sure it will happen. But of course the concept of hybrid cloud is much more than implementing the cloud orchestrator and by the way, the current technology is still not mature and thus not able to do much more than provisioning a virtual server from a few well-defined providers – at the best!

Interesting is also that the hybrid cloud vision and target capabilities for such solutions are also changing. A year ago we focused on the APIs that is needed to integrate across a large number of heterogeneous providers and enterprises with a cloud orchestrator in order to achieve the flexibility of moving discrete workloads across different providers. Today we are still not able to this, at the best we can do something similar with one or two providers, but not at any large scale. So, what is happening? Are we not seeing the APIs emerging that enable heterogeneous providers and enterprises integrate? No we are not – and a good reason is the emerging and strong drive of OpenStack:


OpenStack software controls large pools of compute, storage, and networking resources throughout a datacenter, managed through a dashboard or via the OpenStack API. OpenStack works with popular enterprise and open source technologies making it ideal for heterogeneous infrastructure.

Hundreds of the world’s largest brands rely on OpenStack to run their businesses every day, reducing costs and helping them move faster. OpenStack has a strong ecosystem, and users seeking commercial support can choose from different OpenStack-powered products and services in the Marketplace.
The software is built by a thriving community of developers, in collaboration with users, and is designed in the open at our Summits.

Only this last year basically all the major cloud providers have issued OpenStack compliance statements or announced a strategy to achieve such compliancy within a short time.

In parallel the hybrid cloud vision is also changing, its no longer a target to only integrate heterogeneous providers and enterprises, but indeed to establish the capability of provisioning arbitrary resources from any OpenStack-based provider, but the ultimate goal is; not only consume resources, but also contribute resources to “any” other consumer!!

This is pretty ambitious, but none the less very interesting. This means that any enterprise that has invested and built their private cloud also can contribute resources to the “world” of hybrid cloud consumers. There are of course “small” issues like ability to invoice for the consumed resources. OpenStack whom predicted this “World Wide Cloud” vision, has already started the billing discussion that might also include resources like applications - so maybe enterprises will have a new business opportunity as SaaS providers…

Friday, February 6, 2015

Ken Follett's Century Trilogy


Despite huge successes like the Eye of the Needle and The Key to Rebecca, I was a bit reluctant to start on Ken Follett's ambitious Century Trilogy as I expected something of a thriller style story telling, but that was not what I found opening Fall of Giants, the first book in the trilogy, on the contrary I found myself meeting a Welsh coal miner family and the 13 year old Dave who had his first day in the black and hot coal-mine far down below the ground… not much of a thriller, more like a socio-political story… but things changed rapidly and the author easily caught my attention as he quickly started to weave the socio-political day-to-day life of this small Welsh family into the big events of our European history.

This is where Ken Follett really is impressive and ingenious, he ambitiously tells us the history of Europe, Russia and North America by adding a second layer on top consisting of five families, two in the UK, one in each of Russia, Germany and North America.
In the beginning these families are just any families in each geography as the historical events takes all the readers attention as the author brings in so much details and insight into [unknown] persons and events that caused and orchestrated the big events like the first world war and the Russian revolution. But already in Winter of the World, the second book of the trilogy, you realise that the author has actually planned in details the way he is weaving each of these families into all of the historical events enabling him to tell the history from “inside” as opposed as a historian. This is very cleverly done and makes it easy to stay focused throughout all the almost 3000 pages. By the time you start on Edge of Eternity, the third and last book of the trilogy, you are equally interested to learn what happens to these families as to the development of the history itself – and this is again the cleverness of the author because most of us are much more up to date on our most recent history and thus to keep the attention of the reader the families and their destinies becomes the driving force… fascinating and very, very clever.
On more thing, in a recent TV interview Ken Follett told us about his admiration of his wife, who is obviously a strong feminist, and this possibly explains why all his female characters are so strong – yet another reason to read this amazing trilogy!

Saturday, November 15, 2014

I am Pilgrim

Already at the front of the book it states that this is the only thriller that you need to read this year - to me you may very well read any other thrillers as well, but I am pretty sure none of them are going to be as great as I am Pilgrim.
This is the kind of book you are likely to get up in the middle of the night due to insomnia as you just have to read a few more pages to get some more answers.
This is the first novel by Terry Hayes and as such it is of course even more impressive, but as he has an extensive background as screenwriter he obviously knows the writer trade.

Another reason to read this thriller is that it is set in present time and actually make you reflect on some of the very serious and important political and religious challenges we have daily in our current global society.

To me, this is the best  thriller I have ever read !
#IamPilgrim

Sunday, September 21, 2014

The life of Arve - or my caterpillar becomes a butterfly

 This is the short [life] story of one of my Painted Ladies raised in my flat in Oslo this summer and released from my balcony together with his four other cousins in August 2014:
This is Arve, my adult Painted Lady (Vanessa Cardui)
Here Arve is just about to "escape" his pupa (chrysalis) after his transformation from larva

Just about to pull himself out

Finally outside, pumping his wings

Almost there!!

Perfect - ready to fly out into the big world and possibly even to south Europe or Africa!

Friday, September 19, 2014

The Goldfinch

Donna Tartt is an excellent storyteller and The Goldfinch is a "brick" of a book that draws you quickly into a present time with a small kid who experiences a terror attack and who grows up in very diverse environment and culture that forces you to think through your own life and choices that makes this book a book you would like to last for ever.
Donna Tartt is very thorough and "wordy" in her storytelling, but with very few exceptions I really love her writing and can easily understand why she got the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction 2014.
From time to time, the story gets really exciting and is even close to a crime story, but what I really value the most is her warm description of some of the people the main character meets and gets close to - that even includes his best friend Boris who has a very "bad" influence on the main character, but has his way of showing love under his "bad" exterior that is fascinating and a bit scary.
Enjoy this excellent book it would take a while before you get across something as good as this - and if you have seen some of the great European art in any of the great museums in Amsterdam, the story gets even better :-)

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