I read this book on the beach in Costa Rica last February. It was a quick read and was well written. Of course I was doing a Ryan McBeth relaxed look alike with Hawaiian shirt, straw hat, good cigar, and a good glass of whiskey
It was a good read. I liked it. I don't think the wife would have left the husband. Clearly, she was into the lifestyle he provided. Maybe that could be a sub-plot for the next one.
Currently reading The Last Republic. I like it a lot. I don't want to give anything away. So, that's all I'll say. I like it.
After watching this review, his discussion of a sequel reminded me of a Star Trek:TOS Season 2, Episode 16 “The Gamesters of Triskelion”. Rather than being biologically evolved beings who lost the need of corporal form, what if they were a quantum network whose nodes evolved sentience, employing game theory?
I read this book on the beach in Costa Rica last February. It was a quick read and was well written. Of course I was doing a Ryan McBeth relaxed look alike with Hawaiian shirt, straw hat, good cigar, and a good glass of whiskey
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You keep saying textbook. I do not think the word means what you think it means.
Dude is chunky!
It was a good read. I liked it. I don't think the wife would have left the husband. Clearly, she was into the lifestyle he provided. Maybe that could be a sub-plot for the next one.
Currently reading The Last Republic. I like it a lot. I don't want to give anything away. So, that's all I'll say. I like it.
Thanks, man. If you like it, consider leaving a review on Amazon. They really help.
Quantum Game Theory meets Quantum Networks https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08928
After watching this review, his discussion of a sequel reminded me of a Star Trek:TOS Season 2, Episode 16 “The Gamesters of Triskelion”. Rather than being biologically evolved beings who lost the need of corporal form, what if they were a quantum network whose nodes evolved sentience, employing game theory?