Cyber ​​semantics without SMS and registration

I, like many IT people, have a very rich imagination. And sometimes I imagined (very colorfully and in detail) how I meet myself as a 16-year-old. What I say to myself. What I will teach. I warn you against any errors. A familiar story, huh?



Then I grew up and realized that life experience is such a thing that you can’t easily convey in a nutshell. And even in two million words, many things cannot be conveyed. They can only be experienced and understood through this, and nothing else.



Nevertheless, fantasy is a masterful thing, it brings dreams if it itself wishes, and does not ask you about it. And now, when I was already tired of thinking about what I would give myself for my 16th birthday (in addition to summarizing stock quotes so as not to freelance my whole life as a virgin for food) - I wrote a small book. Even two books. Which then put together into one, and called it - "Cyber ​​semantics."





“Cyber ​​semantics” about how the words and the meanings are related. And how exactly such a connection is formed, and how it affects the human mind and life.


“Cyber ​​semantics” is a simple language and an easy syllable (I wrote something for a 16-year-old) about complex things. I will not describe the contents of this book now, because it is already small - 15-20 minutes of quick reading.



All who read it respond well. Everything. Another thing is that not many people are interested in the work of consciousness in our society. But I thought that the Khabrovsk citizens in this sense are different from society as a whole - I still have certain illusions about our caste.



The book is freely available on Yandex.Disk as a ZIP archive

added. flooded additionally on GitHub: github.com/dev2winners/books more in the comments wrote about some problems with Yandex.


The archive contains PDF, FB2 and EPUB versions.



Enjoy!

Roman D., telegram: romand



PS This article was originally posted by me in the “I PR” hub, and then the moderators independently transferred it to where you see it now, hence a somewhat uncharacteristic format.



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