-
All books
-
-
Shadow-
s in Zambou-
la -
- Shadows in Zamboula
- By Robert E. Howard




-
Shadow-
-
- Worms of the Earth
-
- Worms of the Earth
- By Robert E. Howard




-
- The People of the Black Ci…
-
- The People of the Black Circle
- By Robert E. Howard




-
- The Hour of the Dragon
-
- The Hour of the Dragon
- By Robert E. Howard




-
- A witch shall be born
-
- A witch shall be born
- By Robert E. Howard




-
-
-
- Programmers at Work
- Interviews With 19 Programmers Who Shaped the Computer Industry (Tempus)
-
-
-
The Tower of the Elefan-
t -
- The Tower of the Elefant
- By Robert E. Howard




-
The Tower of the Elefan-
-
-
The Slithe-
ring Shadow -
- The Slithering Shadow
- By Robert E. Howard




-
The Slithe-
-
-
The Scarle-
t Citade-
l -
- The Scarlet Citadel
- By Robert E. Howard




-
The Scarle-
-
- The Pool of the Black One
-
- The Pool of the Black One
- By Robert E. Howard




-
-
The Phoeni-
x on the Sword -
- The Phoenix on the Sword
- By Robert E. Howard




-
The Phoeni-
Pablo Rodríguez Madroño has more books in other languages ...
RSS feeds: subscribe to Pablo Rodríguez Madroño's shelf

Programmers at Work
This book was written twenty years ago, but it is surprising (and somewhat depressing) to note that many of the topics and issues of programming, like managing complexity or finding talent ago are still unsolved.
Other issues, like hardware limits, are no longer a worry for programmers. It is ... (continue)
This book was written twenty years ago, but it is surprising (and somewhat depressing) to note that many of the topics and issues of programming, like managing complexity or finding talent ago are still unsolved.
Other issues, like hardware limits, are no longer a worry for programmers. It is shocking to know how the total memory of a computer was less than the size of a picture taken from my phone camera.
While some predictions for the future have turned completely wrong, sometimes they are strangely right.
I feel identified on some of the comments of all of the interviewed programmers, but I don't fully agree with any of them!
A well-worth historical read, to know where we come from a guess where we are headed to.
Is this helpful?