While I enjoyed this book immensely, the fact that Borsk Fey'lya managed to continue to be a major player in the New Republic after the events of this book is surprising. At the very least you'd think the Bothans would have sent someone else to represent them on the New Republic Council after he managed to mess up this badly.
Interesting story, which ends on a nice cliffhanger, and with a well written group of adventurers (with [a:John Rogers 264571 John Rogers https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/m_50x66-e89fc14c32a41c0eb4298dfafe929b65.png], who Blue Beetle, along with being the show-runner for Leverage).
This was a nicely written novel. The completing colliding schemes are plotted very well.
Good start to this volume, before it gets to my second least favorite bit of the Golden Age arc with Casca.
Good conclusion to the Guardians of Desire arc, and an interesting start to the Golden Age arc.
This is primarily a collection of vignettes, but somewhat interesting ones. In particular, I liked the storylines involving Black Mask slowly building control of Gotham (though I suspect that this isn't the same Black Mask who tortured Stephanie Brown), along with Batman taking down Hush & Firefly. Also, the character of Mr. Fine is an interesting character, and definitely one who I'm considering snitching for a supers campaign.
I really like this story. Generally, with cosmic SF stories, I prefer it when they really give the universe a sense of scope, as opposed to putting more of the focus on the heroes and letting the ancillary characters fade to the background - this is one of the things that has really worked with Green Lantern ever since Dave Gibbons run on the books.
This book is amusing, certainly, but I wouldn't exactly call it a great work of computer history. It's basically the story of a humorist working for a corporation, sitting in the cogs. It's inoffensive and worth checking out from the library, but I wouldn't call this a must-have book about the history of the computer industry.