Yes, I've been looking into that. Amazon is the most obvious choice because they basically do everything for you. I've seen other services with pros and cons, so eventually I'll probably decide either one or more of these options, whatever gives me the chance to reach the maximum number of readers.
For example with Amazon I have less flexibility to e.g. give someone a discount coupon, so I'll probably do both Amazon for mass sales ("mass") and another more especialized service to be able to offer supporters a link to buy the physical copy at basically the printing plus shipping cost.
I'm not sure how connected graph theory is to knowledge graphs, but I think understanding graphs will be the key to using AI, especially for those in the content industry.
So I want to learn all I can about how graphs work in computer science.
Oh yeah they're very connected, and you mentioning that just suggested me a couple of very important applications regarding knowledge discovery and inference. I'll definitely touch that topic.
Oh sure, make the rest of us feel crappy about our lack of productivity as you write not one but two books in parallel. Class act, Alejandro!
That way I can fail to fulfill your expectations not once, but twice!
Will there eventually be a physical copy available?
Yes, I've been looking into that. Amazon is the most obvious choice because they basically do everything for you. I've seen other services with pros and cons, so eventually I'll probably decide either one or more of these options, whatever gives me the chance to reach the maximum number of readers.
For example with Amazon I have less flexibility to e.g. give someone a discount coupon, so I'll probably do both Amazon for mass sales ("mass") and another more especialized service to be able to offer supporters a link to buy the physical copy at basically the printing plus shipping cost.
This is exactly what i need.
Seriously?! Please let me know what would you be most interested in reading about.
I'm not sure how connected graph theory is to knowledge graphs, but I think understanding graphs will be the key to using AI, especially for those in the content industry.
So I want to learn all I can about how graphs work in computer science.
Oh yeah they're very connected, and you mentioning that just suggested me a couple of very important applications regarding knowledge discovery and inference. I'll definitely touch that topic.