Books of 2024: Part 1
Monday, December 30, 2024 at 8:09AM
Roy Rubenstein in Harald Bock, Huawei, Infinera, Jonathan Homa, Maxim Kuschnerov, Ribbon Communications, books

Gazettabyte asks industry figures to pick their notable reads during the year. Harald Bock, Jonathan Homa, and Maxim Kuschenrov kick off with their chosen books.

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Harald Bock, Vice President Network Architecture, Infinera

I love reading but have not read as many books as I would have liked in recent years. I decided to change that in 2024.

My pick of fictional books this year was mainly classic science fiction after seeing the movie Dune Part 2 with my family. I read the book Dune by Frank Herbert, published in 1965, a while ago, and I wasn't sure that the movies did the book justice.

My son advised me to launch myself into all five sequels of Dune, which kept me busy. While the sequels are for die-hard fans, I recommend the first of the books whether or not you've seen the movie. Frank Herbert's modern and sophisticated thinking adds unconventional perspectives to up-to-date societal, environmental and political questions.

I went on to read Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles and H.G. Wells' Time Machine, published in 1950 and 1895, respectively. The two books are fascinating as they are timeless and do not require any adaptation to modern times. They are classics of their genre.

I also found time for non-fictional books. I was looking for unconventional thoughts by unlikely authors to challenge my thinking.

One that adds to the discussions about sustainability is a book by Fred Vargas, a French author who normally writes crime fiction and is an archaeologist and historian. 'L'humanité en péril: Virons de bord, toute !' was published as a follow-up to an older, shorter text by the same author read on the occasion of the conference on climate change COP24 in Paris in 2018. Surprisingly, the book does not yet exist in English.

Another interesting author is a professor of computer science, Katharina Zweig. Her books: Awkward Intelligence: Where AI Goes Wrong, Why It Matters, and What We Can Do about It and Die KI war's: Von absurd bis tödlich: Die Tücken der künstlichen Intelligenz ('It was the AI: From absurd to deadly: The pitfalls of artificial intelligence', in German only to date) do a good job exploring considerations, boundary conditions, and limits of using AI systems in practical decision-making.

 

Jonathan Homa, Senior Director of Solutions Marketing at Ribbon Communications

I recommend a book I re-read this year: The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco. As my wife points out, re-reading a book is its own recommendation.

This is an intricate and beautifully written murder mystery novel set in late medieval Europe. Through the eyes of the protagonist, Brother William of Baskerville, we begin to see glimpses of enlightenment. I also recommend the 1986 movie by the same name, starring Sean Connery.

 

Maxim Kuschnerov, director of R&D at Huawei

I had a light year of reading. One book I did read was Nuclear War: A Scenario by Annie Jacobsen which details the scenario of how a nuclear war would go down if someone started it. The answer: a surprisingly quick annihilation of humankind.

I also read Angela Merkel’s autobiography, Freedom: Memoirs 1954 – 2021 - that was published recently. I was hoping for more insight into her thinking when dealing with the immigration crisis or with Vladimir Putin, but the book added nothing that I didn't already know about her. The book clarified how Angela Merkel was profoundly shaped in her upbringing by Eastern German communism and Russia.

The request to highlight my reads of 2024 made me think about what I have been reading this past year. Perhaps disappointingly, it turned out to be mostly not-noteworthy fiction.

Article originally appeared on Gazettabyte (https://www.gazettabyte.com/).
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