HackerNews Readings
40,000 HackerNews book recommendations identified using NLP and deep learning

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Zag: The Number One Strategy of High-Performance Brands

Marty Neumeier

4.6 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Product-Led Growth: How to Build a Product That Sells Itself

Wes Bush

4.6 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Star Schema The Complete Reference

Christopher Adamson

4.6 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Agile Data Warehouse Design: Collaborative Dimensional Modeling, from Whiteboard to Star Schema

Lawrence Corr and Jim Stagnitto

4.6 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Penetration Testing: A Hands-On Introduction to Hacking

Georgia Weidman

4.6 on Amazon

1 HN comments

The Software Architect Elevator: Redefining the Architect's Role in the Digital Enterprise

Gregor Hohpe

4.6 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Modern Java in Action: Lambdas, streams, functional and reactive programming

Raoul-Gabriel Urma, Mario Fusco, et al.

4.5 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Fallout 4: Game of the Year Edition: Prima Official Guide

David Hodgson and Nick von Esmarch

4.5 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Beginning C++ Through Game Programming

Michael Dawson

4.6 on Amazon

1 HN comments

The Simulation Hypothesis: An MIT Computer Scientist Shows Why AI, Quantum Physics and Eastern Mystics All Agree We Are In a Video Game

Rizwan Virk

4.4 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Beginning Programming All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies

Wallace Wang

4.5 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Arduino Cookbook: Recipes to Begin, Expand, and Enhance Your Projects

Michael Margolis , Brian Jepson , et al.

4.7 on Amazon

1 HN comments

The Self-Assembling Brain: How Neural Networks Grow Smarter

Peter Robin Hiesinger

5 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Become an Effective Software Engineering Manager: How to Be the Leader Your Development Team Needs

Dr. Stanier, James

4.4 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Genius Makers: The Mavericks Who Brought AI to Google, Facebook, and the World

Cade Metz, John Lee, et al.

4.5 on Amazon

1 HN comments

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nullspaceonSep 20, 2020

As someone who recently did that after ~8 years, I found it useful to skim through Modern Java in Action. It should be pretty easy read if you've been doing more modern languages, but important to learn Java semantics and nuances. Also, I highly recommend Java Concurrency in Practice, but it's a tougher read.

That said, for most orgs, the biggest changes you might see would be in libraries and frameworks used. There will most likely be less XML, better build tools and more modular library usage than 12 years ago.

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