If you work in a team environment, I recommend these two books: The Phoenix Project and The Unicorn Project.
Not strictly about programming, but focuses on software projects and devops. The fast-paced novels will make your drive go much faster.
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If you work in a team environment, I recommend these two books: The Phoenix Project and The Unicorn Project.
Not strictly about programming, but focuses on software projects and devops. The fast-paced novels will make your drive go much faster.
I read The Phoenix Project recently, and had a PTSD episode from all of the hallmarks of dysfunction that I’ve experienced in my career. Good book, but probably needs a trigger warning.
I recently re-read the book and had a similarly traumatic episode from all the managers over my career that read the book and somehow took the wrong lessons from the dysfunction portrayed.
I think you’ll have better luck with podcasts. Technical books tend to have long tracts of code that would be excruciating to listen to.
You might enjoy:
Pragmatic Programmer is OK, there's not any code that I can remember and it's just general purpose, helpful ideas for programmers to follow
I don't know of many recorded audio books, but you could also use a Text to Speech engine to listen to any technical blogs or articles. I use Android apps like Pocket or T2S to queue up a backlog of TODO read items, then when I'm out for a long walk, I can just press play and let the TTS do it's thing. Of course, I curate this list for longer pure text reads, devoid of code snippets, equations, or visual graphics that TTS would have a tough time conveying over audio.
Looks like I may need to find a successor to pocket. They do a great job scraping connect via readable mode, but I'd like to find a shelf hosted or mobile+offline app equivalent for queuing up web articles, just in case pocket gets cut from further development by Mozilla management.