I'm not a full time developer, pero I choose my resource by asking:
- is it closely related to my specialization. - is the content concise enough with comprehensive examples and simple/layman english. That makes it easy to undestand. Beware of books that deals so much with technical jargon. - is it authored by a well-known industry practitioner? If you want to have a technical resource, the author must have very significant experience with the subject matter. - is the resource able to provide the solution you require for a current project. These are just my personal guideline in choosing a resource (book, ebook, site, etc.). And it helped me out narrow down my solution searches very much. On 5/3/07, Jason Yap <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Guys. Unsa mga books na nabasa ninyo na nakatabang jud ug ayu sa career ninyo as "programmers" or "developers"? Just want to here from the gurus. :) Thanks and God bless -- "Just being alive is such a lovely and wonderful thing." _________________________________________________ Kagay-Anon Linux Users' Group (KLUG) Mailing List [email protected] (http://cdo.linux.org.ph) Searchable Archives: http://archives.free.net.ph
-- "A dog that has no bite, barks loudest." Registered Linux User #400165 http://baudizm.blogsome.com http://phossil.ifastnet.com Subscribed to: LARTC, Open-ITLUG, PRUG, KLUG, sybase.public.ase.linux SHA256: 857dd62339c9fe27460b725747dfe25d5612933f7d879c35fb0cba2dadaf972f
_________________________________________________ Kagay-Anon Linux Users' Group (KLUG) Mailing List [email protected] (http://cdo.linux.org.ph) Searchable Archives: http://archives.free.net.ph
