Philippe Hadengue
Philippe Hadengue (17 September 1932, Paris[1]) is a French writer and painter, winner of the Inter Book Prize and the Prix Louis-Guilloux in 1989 for Petite chronique des gens de nuit dans un port de l'Atlantique Nord.
Work
- 1989: Petite chronique des gens de nuit dans un port de l'Atlantique Nord, éd. Maren Sell — prix du Livre Inter and prix Louis-Guilloux
- 1989: La Cabane aux écrevisses, éd. Maren Sell
- 1993: La Loi du cachalot, éd. Calmann-Lévy
- 1999: Quelqu'un est mort dans la maison d'en face, éd. Pauvert
- 1999: L'Exode, éd. Pauvert
- 2001: Un Te Deum en Île-de-France, éd. Pauvert
- 2006: Lames, éd. Maren Sell
gollark: I mean, outside of toy models or whatever.
gollark: Maybe you could make a good scifi thing a hundred years in the future or something about faster computers/better optimization algorithms/distributed system designs/something making central planning more tractable. Although in the future supply chains will probably be even more complex. But right now, it is NOT practical.
gollark: In any case, if you have a planned system and some new need comes up... what do you do, spend weeks updating the models and rerunning them? That is not really quick enough.
gollark: If you want to factor in each individual location's needs in some giant model, you'll run into issues like:- people lying- it would be horrifically complex
gollark: Information flow: imagine some farmer, due to some detail of their climate/environment, needs extra wood or something. But the central planning models just say "each farmer needs 100 units of wood for farming 10 units of pig"; what are they meant to do?
References
- Philippe Hadengue le pur : Intérieur nuit by Catherine David in Le Nouvel Observateur 24 November 1988.
External links
- Philippe Hadengue : Un Te Deum en Ile de France on INA
- Intérieur Nuit on Nouvelobs.com/archives
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