agarv an hour ago

The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories and The Hidden Girl and Other Stories by Ken Liu

The Bug by Ellen Ullman

Radicalized by Corey Doctrow

Valuable Humans in Transit and Other Stories by qntm

code_Whisperer 2 hours ago

"Galatea 2.2" by (my all-time favorite author) Richard Powers

"Off to Be the Wizard" by Scott Meyer

"Daemon" by Daniel Suarez

"The Adolescence of P1" (vintage) by Thomas Ryan

"Snow Crash" by William Gibson

"Ready Player One" by Ernest Cline

"We are Legion [We are Bob]" by Dennis Taylor

LarryMade2 14 hours ago

These are all entertaining:

Definitely the Wizardry series by Rick Cook

https://www.fantasticfiction.com/c/rick-cook/wizardry/

Programming meets magical realms

James Hogan

Inherit the Stars - Has supercomputers but not main characters

Code of the Lifemaker Has Ancient Tech evolving into a robotic society

Two Faces of Tomorrow - humans trying to get along with AI

D.F.Jones

Colossus, the Fall of Colossus, and Colossus and the Crab

Humans creating machines to protect humanity (computers have different idea) and the rebellion, and a new threat.

A Logic Names Joe - radioplay of short story.

https://archive.org/details/OTRR_X_Minus_One_Singles/XMinusO...

The internet and AI long before the internet and AI.

David Gerrold - When H.A.R.L.I.E. was One - and other tales involving Artificial Super Intelligence

William Gibson - Neuromancer and related - Cyberpunk series, the Difference Engine - a Steampunk technology tale.

  • ferguess_k 3 hours ago

    Definitely recommends the Wizardry series. It has a FORTH vibe.

  • LarryMade2 13 hours ago

    Fred Saberhagen

    Octagon - an AI backdoor created by the early inventors of computers is inadvertently "activated" by a youth.

argo_navis 6 hours ago

Laundry Files Series by Charles Stross Written by a ex-programmer, features a world where magic is a branch of mathematics, so you can for example write an app to summon demons, or accidentally turn yourself into a vampire by implementing a particularly extravagant algorithm.

https://www.goodreads.com/series/50764-laundry-files

netcoyote 17 hours ago

The Vorkosigan Series, by Louise McMasters Bujold. She’s won six (!!!) Hugo awards for her writing, and as Anne McCaffery says, “Boy, can she write”.

Space opera with warfare, intrigue, politics, drama, and world building.

vismit2000 9 hours ago

'Stories of your Life and Others' and 'Exhalation' - by Ted Chiang. In his short stories, he introduces advanced concepts from mathematics, philosophy, and computer science in a way that’s subtly woven into captivating narratives.

  • torstenvl 2 hours ago

    Strongly second Exhalation by Ted Chiang. "The Life Cycle of Software Objects" is especially compelling.

delichon 7 hours ago

"Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus" by Mary Shelley. The themes in this book are more relevant now than at any time since publication in 1818, and to nobody more than ML coders.

GrumpyYoungMan 17 hours ago

Terry Pratchett's Going Postal seems particularly apropos these days as we have Reacher Gilts aplenty in tech news headlines.

Obscure and a bit dated but Bruce Betkhe's Head Crash is hilarious if you've been deeply immersed in the software industry.

austin-cheney 7 hours ago

Eon by Greg Bear.

A Deepness in the Sky by Vernor Vinge.

  • torstenvl 2 hours ago

    I'm finding A Deepness in the Sky pretty drudging to be honest.

    • austin-cheney 2 hours ago

      It gets slow after the merging of the two competing factions at the beginning and then builds momentum after the anti-hero's back story half way through. It just might be my most favorite book. I found the building dominance of the anti-hero to be similar but less epic than that of Raistlin Majere from DragonLance.

bediger4000 18 hours ago

Cryptonomicon and Snow Crash, Neal Stephenson

  • turtleyacht 8 hours ago

    Anathem and The Diamond Age too

bigyabai 18 hours ago

Library of Babel, Borges

dtagames 18 hours ago

Three Body Problem by Cixin Liu, himself a programmer.