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10 Things To Improve Your Development Career

Cruising the Web late last night, I ran across "10
things you can do to advance your career as a developer"
, summarized below:

Read more ...

 

10 Things To Improve Your Development Career

Cruising the Web late last night, I ran across "10
things you can do to advance your career as a developer"
, summarized below:

Read more ...

 

10 Things To Improve Your Development Career

Cruising the Web late last night, I ran across "10
things you can do to advance your career as a developer"
, summarized below:

Read more ...

 

2010 Predictions, 2009 Predictions Revisited

Here we go again—another year, another set of predictions revisited and offered up
for the next 12 months. And maybe, if I'm feeling really ambitious, I'll take that
shot I thought about last year and try predicting for the decade.

Read more ...

 

2010 Predictions, 2009 Predictions Revisited

Here we go again—another year, another set of predictions revisited and offered up
for the next 12 months. And maybe, if I'm feeling really ambitious, I'll take that
shot I thought about last year and try predicting for the decade.

Read more ...

 

2010 Predictions, 2009 Predictions Revisited

Here we go again—another year, another set of predictions revisited and offered up
for the next 12 months. And maybe, if I'm feeling really ambitious, I'll take that
shot I thought about last year and try predicting for the decade.

Read more ...

 

A New Kind of Service

Why study new and different programming languages? To change your programming mindset.
Not sure what I mean by that? Check this out.

Ever done one of these?

Read more ...

 

A New Kind of Service

Why study new and different programming languages? To change your programming mindset.
Not sure what I mean by that? Check this out.

Ever done one of these?

Read more ...

 

A New Kind of Service

Why study new and different programming languages? To change your programming mindset.
Not sure what I mean by that? Check this out.

Ever done one of these?

Read more ...

 

Thoughts from the (Java)Edge 2009

These are the things I think as I sit here in my resort hotel on the edge of the Dead
Sea in Israel after the JavaEdge
2009 conference
on Thursday:

Read more ...

 

Thoughts from the (Java)Edge 2009

These are the things I think as I sit here in my resort hotel on the edge of the Dead
Sea in Israel after the JavaEdge
2009 conference
on Thursday:

Read more ...

 

Thoughts from the (Java)Edge 2009

These are the things I think as I sit here in my resort hotel on the edge of the Dead
Sea in Israel after the JavaEdge
2009 conference
on Thursday:

Read more ...

 

Book Review: Debug It! (Paul Butcher, Pragmatic Bookshelf)

Paul asked me to review this, his first book, and my comment to him was that he had
a pretty high bar to match; being of the same "series" as Release It!,
Mike Nygard's take on building software ready for production (and, in my repeatedly
stated opinion, the most important-to-read book of the decade), Debug It! had
some pretty impressive shoes to fill. Paul's comment was pretty predictable: "Thanks
for keeping the pressure to a minimum."

Read more ...

 

Book Review: Debug It! (Paul Butcher, Pragmatic Bookshelf)

Paul asked me to review this, his first book, and my comment to him was that he had
a pretty high bar to match; being of the same "series" as Release It!,
Mike Nygard's take on building software ready for production (and, in my repeatedly
stated opinion, the most important-to-read book of the decade), Debug It! had
some pretty impressive shoes to fill. Paul's comment was pretty predictable: "Thanks
for keeping the pressure to a minimum."

Read more ...

 

Book Review: Debug It! (Paul Butcher, Pragmatic Bookshelf)

Paul asked me to review this, his first book, and my comment to him was that he had
a pretty high bar to match; being of the same "series" as Release It!,
Mike Nygard's take on building software ready for production (and, in my repeatedly
stated opinion, the most important-to-read book of the decade), Debug It! had
some pretty impressive shoes to fill. Paul's comment was pretty predictable: "Thanks
for keeping the pressure to a minimum."

Read more ...

 
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