I loved The Forcek Assignment! I’ve read most of Ray Adam’s books and this is by far my favorite so far. It’s short, at about 110 pages, but that means it’s fast paced. There are only a few characters, so you only really get to know Roo Raker, but that’s enough.
It has a plot which would be at home in any The Original Series Star Trek film, a mysterious red head and a couple of twists I should have seen coming and didn’t. I’ll never understand Ray’s obsession with creating characters who smoke, but that’s no detractor, and I was left with just one question - well lots of questions, but one big one - why is Roo Raker’s name never shortened?!
The Forcek Assignment! Is the first of a trilogy, and I have the second lined up already.
Ray Adams
ISBN-13: 979-8679926462
I was out walking with a techie friend of mine I’d not seen for a while and he asked me if I’d written anything recently. I hadn’t, other than an article on data sharing a few months before and I realised I was missing it. Well, not the writing itself, but the end result. In the last few weeks, another friend of mine, John Cricket , has been setting weekly code challenges via linkedin and his new website, https://codingchallenges.fyi/ . They were all quite interesting, but one in particular on writing load balancers appealed, so I thought I’d kill two birds with one stone and write up a worked example. You’ll find my worked example below. The challenge itself is italics and voice is that of John Crickets. The Coding Challenge https://codingchallenges.fyi/challenges/challenge-load-balancer/ Write Your Own Load Balancer This challenge is to build your own application layer load balancer. A load balancer sits in front of a group of servers and routes client requests across all of the serv...
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