Software development books for Christmas 2008
Dec/081
In a post on JavaLobby, Meera presents her TOP5 of technical books published in 2008.
I definitely agree with the first three: a new book from Robert C. Martin, the second edition of the great Effective Java and a collection of articles from ThoughtWorks.
I haven’t read yet the first one but i liked his “Agile Software Development” and the initial reviews are quite good.
The new edition of Effective Java contains 21 new items and presents 1.5 language features such as enum, generics and annotations and also updates items related to improved features e.g. items in the concurrency section.
An interesting reading is also the ThoughtWorks Anthology, a collection of essays on various IT topics, ranging from software methodology advices to ant build files optimization tips.
If you are a software developer or if you know one, this time of the year is the right time to buy one of these books.
Let me add a few more titles, that even if not published in 2008 (or not technical) could be good gift ideas:
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Java Puzzlers: Traps, Pitfalls and corner cases
Another book from the great Joshua Bloch based on the JavaOne’s serie of presentations, full of thought-provoking “puzzles” related to details or known bug of the Java language. |
| C++ Common Knowledge: Essential Intermediate Programming
As the cover says : “What Every Professional C++ Programmer Needs to Know—Pared to Its Essentials So It Can Be Efficiently and Accurately Absorbed”. |
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My job went to India
In this book published in 2005 , Chad Fowler takes his experience with outsourcing in India as a starting point to give reasonable advices about IT carer development. Even if some of these could sound obvious (as reasonable advices usually are), the book is still an enjoyable reading and give you the opportunity to review the way you approach your job in IT and think about what could be improved. |
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Permutation City
A post-cyberpunk sci-fi book by Greg Egan, full of clever ideas about AIs, future post-death scenarios and virtual reality. |
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10:58 am on December 25th, 2008
And what about some classic like Design Patterns or a J2ME/Android/IPhoneDev book?