Such a fascinating subject. Unfortunately I found author's writing style pretty distracting and superfluous. I had to drop it halfway through.
If someone asks you to read this book cover to cover without any hints of its name and, in the end asks you to name it. Most readers would concur the title is truly deserving of the pages that follow.
Written in 1936, with the right vantage point of earlier Indian history and set social hierarchy of the time. This book helps reader realize forces that were in play during India's struggle of Freedom and how inept, uneducated and selective each school of thought was towards social reforms. The lingering effects of which can be seen today, which further help prove that author's point.
Outside the content of the book, This book can be a good learning opportunity for the readers on “How to make a point”. Ambedkar indeed is one of the best intellectual India has ever produced.
I don't specifically have the criticism for the contents of the book. But writing in this book is horrible. It eventually got slightly better. Overall it was hard to follow and often distracting.
Effective and interesting tool to have. But this book is highly inflated with testimonials and generic stuff. If you ask me this book gets over within first 2 chapters and after that author keeps on dragging the same content over and over. All content of the book can be easily fit within a medium length blog post.
Good
1. Cover things on breadth
2. Provides Kubernetes examples. Feel free to skip, if you are not using Kubernetes in production.
3. Good for high level overview.
Bad:
1. Too short.
2. Missing on few things, I was expecting containerization performance, examples of fault-tolerant patterns, deployment paradigms and patterns, testing patterns, data security and control patterns etc.
3. more depth.