We're stocking the office library at Nomic… five books per person. Got four down (image)… what's your pick for the last slot at an information cartography firm?
@benmschmidt perhaps “Kill It with Fire
MANAGE AGING COMPUTER SYSTEMS (AND FUTURE PROOF MODERN ONES)
By Marianne Bellotti” for a long-term view?
@anj That's a nice idea, definitely need something touching on software engineering because all our people who have been really doing it for 20+ years are remote and we're still figuring out how to properly bake their understanding into the in-person company culture.
@benmschmidt @anj oh huh, I didn’t know you were hiring remotely at all.
@thatandromeda @anj Yeah we mostly didn't but there were a couple senior devs who were already pushing to our OSS repos that made too much sense to hold the line.
@benmschmidt @anj that's pretty awesome that you got that much OSS contribution :)
The Ordinal Society — Harvard University Press

A sweeping critique of how digital capitalism is reformatting our world.We now live in an “ordinal society.” Nearly every aspect of our lives is measured, ranked, and processed into discrete, standardized units of digital information. Marion Fourcade and Kieran Healy argue that technologies of information management, fueled by the abundance of personal data and the infrastructure of the internet, transform how we relate to ourselves and to each other through the market, the public sphere, and the state.The personal data we give in exchange for convenient tools like Gmail and Instagram provides the raw material for predictions about everything from our purchasing power to our character. The Ordinal Society shows how these algorithmic predictions influence people’s life chances and generate new forms of capital and social expectation: nobody wants to ride with an unrated cab driver anymore or rent to a tenant without a risk score. As members of this society embrace ranking and measurement in their daily lives, new forms of social competition and moral judgment arise. Familiar structures of social advantage are recycled into measures of merit that produce insidious kinds of social inequality.While we obsess over order and difference—and the logic of ordinality digs deeper into our behaviors, bodies, and minds—what will hold us together? Fourcade and Healy warn that, even though algorithms and systems of rationalized calculation have inspired backlash, they are also appealing in ways that make them hard to relinquish.

Harvard University Press
@benmschmidt OR Neuromancer by William Gibson
@agoldst What do you know about the Fourcade/Healy so far?
@benmschmidt have read various related articles e.g. doi.org/10.1093/ser/mww033 and doi.org/10.1177/2053951719897092. Healy posts teasers, e.g. https://mastodon.social/@kjhealy/111110525017319093 but, disappointingly, no special-effects laden tralier as yet