
Web Scalability for Startup Engineers
Artur Ejsmont
4.8 on Amazon
6 HN comments

Building Secure and Reliable Systems: Best Practices for Designing, Implementing, and Maintaining Systems
Heather Adkins, Betsy Beyer , et al.
4.7 on Amazon
6 HN comments

Show Me the Numbers: Designing Tables and Graphs to Enlighten
Stephen Few
4.5 on Amazon
6 HN comments

Database Internals: A Deep Dive into How Distributed Data Systems Work
Alex Petrov
4.7 on Amazon
6 HN comments

Whatever It Takes: Master the Habits to Transform Your Business, Relationships, and Life
Brandon Bornancin
4.8 on Amazon
6 HN comments

Kubernetes: Up and Running: Dive into the Future of Infrastructure
Brendan Burns , Joe Beda, et al.
4.6 on Amazon
6 HN comments

Python for Kids: A Playful Introduction to Programming
Jason R. Briggs
4.6 on Amazon
6 HN comments

The Phoenix Project (A Novel About IT, DevOps, and Helping Your Business Win)
Gene Kim
4.7 on Amazon
6 HN comments

Terraform: Up & Running: Writing Infrastructure as Code
Yevgeniy Brikman
4.6 on Amazon
6 HN comments

A World Without Email: Reimagining Work in an Age of Communication Overload
Cal Newport, Kevin R. Free, et al.
4.5 on Amazon
5 HN comments

Discovering Statistics Using R
Andy Field, Jeremy Miles , et al.
4.5 on Amazon
5 HN comments

C++ Crash Course: A Fast-Paced Introduction
Josh Lospinoso
4.7 on Amazon
5 HN comments

Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked
Adam Alter and Penguin Audio
4.6 on Amazon
5 HN comments

Kafka: The Definitive Guide: Real-Time Data and Stream Processing at Scale
Neha Narkhede , Gwen Shapira, et al.
4.4 on Amazon
5 HN comments

The Great Reset: How Big Tech Elites and the World's People Can Be Enslaved by China CCP or A.I.
Cyrus Parsa and The AI Organization
4.5 on Amazon
5 HN comments
GayaxonJune 21, 2021
crackercrewsonJuly 10, 2021
How would it help to replace email with the communication tools that Gen Z uses? People expect even more rapid responses to text messages than emails. That means more context switching.
> “It’s impossible to expect email to be the main form of communication because so many people aren’t working office jobs or are sitting in an office with an email notification coming through,” she said. “I don’t think it’s the most relevant way to expect people to communicate with you.”
Seems like this person doesn't know that smartphones receive email.
rektideonMay 18, 2021
I think there's still an unresolved but asked question about how we got stuck here. I forget who observed, but worth noting that the workers themselves tend to demand the popular, already mainstream product, which entrenches tools like Slack.
But I think there's a general lack of willingness & interest in catering to more alpha geeks, in trying to enable humans, in giving them means to tool themselves up. Industrial software is, almost universally, highly massified in nature.
Worth noting that Ezra's already a fan of Cal's work. From 2017[3], discussing Cal's book "Deep Work",
> I was asked recently to name a book that changed my life. The book I chose was Cal Newport’s “Deep Work,” and for the most literal of reasons: It’s changed how I lived my life. Particularly, it’s led me to stop scheduling morning meetings, and to preserve that time for more sustained, creative work.
[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/05/podcasts/ezra-klein-podca...
[2] https://www.calnewport.com/blog/2021/03/15/one-step-closer-t...
[3] https://www.vox.com/2017/4/21/15382282/cal-newport-taking-li...
skadamatonMay 28, 2021
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0525536558/
He takes ideas from Deep Work and builds on them by scaling up the ideas to how an organization should work, coordinate, and collaborate. Specifically, he looks at how to build organizations that are designed to support how our brains have evolved to think & work (without frequent context switches!)
rektideonMay 18, 2021
Getting a big vibe of yesterday's "Slack Destroying American Companies"[1]. I didn't actually click through & read, which would have lead me to finding out it's Matt Taibbi having a discussion with Antonio Garcia-Martinez (who personally I am not interested in hearing from). But the title reminded me of a part of Ezra Klein interviewing Cal Newport about his new book, "A World Without Email"[2]. In the interview they spend quite a while discussing how it seems like the whole world is presently stuck with Slack, how there's so little visible mainstream competition. Cal has been engaged with this question of workflow & tech & collaboration for a number years, often from a somewhat anti- standpoint, with books such as "Deep Work" and "Digital Minimalism". Hearing two sharp minds talking about collaboration was incredibly enriching to me.
Notably, the collaboration tools shown at the beginning of IO are for explicit collaboration times. They're not marketed as always on communication devices, not a replacement for slack. But they both are about modern tech-enabled collaboration, which is an interesting topic, and one that seems like we're only just starting to really dive into. Long long long after Engelbart's Mother of All Demos (52.4 years after).
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27191181
[2] https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/05/podcasts/ezra-klein-podca...