This book is a part of O'Reilly's 97 Things series where individuals contribute short entries to a wiki, which are then edited, from which 97 items are selected for a book.
I found this book on the shelf at Fry's and after paging through it a bit decided buying it and having a hard copy to let others borrow was worth the cover price as opposed to reading it online. The series is different from most books as the entire contents are available to read for free at http://programmer.97things.oreilly.com/
I feel like I got a lot out of this book, maybe the most valuable was that I need to read the book "The Pragmatic Programmer" ASAP.
Here are links to entries that I found the most interesting, they are really short so give a couple of them a look and let me know what you think:
Comment Only What the Code Cannot Say
"…comments should be treated as if they were code. Each comment should add some value for the reader, otherwise it is waste that should be removed or rewritten."
Continuous Learning
"Follow the advice of The Pragmatic Programmers and learn a new language every year."
Do Lots of Deliberate Practice
"Deliberate practice does not mean doing what you are good at; it means challenging yourself, doing what you are not good at. So it's not necessarily fun."
"Deliberate practice is about learning. About learning that changes you; learning that changes your behavior."
Don't Be Cute with Your Test Data
"…when writing any text in your code — whether comments, logging, dialogs, or test data — always ask yourself how it will look if it becomes public."
The Professional Programmer
"Professionals are responsible. They take responsibility for their own careers. They take responsibility for making sure their code works properly. They take responsibility for the quality of their workmanship. They do not abandon their principles when deadlines loom. Indeed, when the pressure mounts, professionals hold ever tighter to the disciplines they know are right."
Read Code
"…don't read another book. Read code."
Simplicity Comes from Reduction
"The code should be simple. There should be a minimal number of variables, functions, declarations, and other syntactic language necessities. Extra lines, extra variables… extra anything, really, should be purged. Removed immediately. What's there, what's left, should only be just enough to get the job done, completing the algorithm or performing the calculations. Anything and everything else is just extra unwanted noise, introduced accidentally and obscuring the flow. Hiding the important stuff."
Two Heads Are Often Better than One
"When pairing, we each bring our collective programming experiences — domain as well as technical — to the problem at hand and can bring unique insight and experience into writing software effectively and efficiently."
Ubuntu Coding for Your Friends
"I get better because you make me better through your good actions."
I hope to put what I have learned into practice immediately and look forward to reading more of the entries that did not make it into the book.
I rate this book a 8 out of 10 and believe that anyone who programs will get something out of it. Remember that the entire book and more are available for free via a Creative Commons License at http://programmer.97things.oreilly.com/
Wow, what a long title. This is a book that I have heard Dave Ramsey recommend time and time again to listeners of his radio show when they have job issues.
I have been listening to and reading some business books this year, and have heard a lot of good things about Seth Godin. When I looked at the books available on Audible by Mr. Godin most of them were focused on marketing which I do not have a lot of interest in. But “Linchpin” sounded really interesting.
I bought this book on Audible.
I bought this book from Audible, it is narrated by the Author.
Harold Davis’ new book on taking digital color photos and transforming them into creative black and white pictures is an inspiring read with a lot of examples and many ways to achieve your vision.
I bought this book on Audible and it is narrated by Dick Fredricks.
I bought this book from Audible to listen to during a road trip to Florida for William and Lucky’s wedding.
The ignite event at the Georgia Aquarium was a great success. We learned about super babies, how to build a hackintosh, rapid brainstorming, and how to keep a happy septic tank among other things.

This weekend in Norcross, come meet baseball great Javier Lopez and candidate for Gwinnett County Commissioner District 2 Lynette Howard for a fundraiser cookout.
From the writer of “Bringing Down the House” comes the story of the founding of Facebook. I listened to the unabridged version of this book purchased on Audible.
The “Maximum Ride” series from James Patterson is a “Young Adult” series that is intended for grades 7 through 9.
Here is a picture of our baby boy who is growing bigger every day. The launch date is August 22nd.