Recommendation form from Bytedance Technical team

Stanford Life Design Lessons by Bill Burnett and Dave Evans

Prof Burnett and Prof Evans argue that there is no single optimal solution to life and that it cannot be perfectly planned. Just as designers don’t just “think” about the future but actively create it, you need to use the design mindset to find your life’s purpose, focus, create more possibilities for yourself, and be bold, so that you can change your destiny.

Enlightenment now. By Steven Pinker

Stephen Pinker takes a panoramic view of the current world, allowing readers to learn the truth about the human condition, what challenges humanity faces, and how to deal with them. He urges us to escrow from scary headlines and gloomy doomsday predictions and instead speak in numbers: in 75 stunning charts, Pinker argues that life expectancy, health, food, peace, knowledge, happiness and more are on the rise, not just in the West, but around the world. This is the gift of the Enlightenment — reason, science, and humanism advance humanity.

Einstein in his Later Years. Albert Einstein

Collection of Einstein’s late literature works, for readers to read.

Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson

Over two years, more than 40 face-to-face interviews with Jobs, as well as unrestricted interviews with more than 100 family members, friends, competitors and colleagues, result in this exclusive biography.

Toby Segaran, Programming for Collective Intelligence

Machine learning and computational statistics as the theme background, specifically about how to mine and analyze data and resources on the Web, how to analyze user experience, marketing, personal taste and many other information, and draw useful conclusions, through complex algorithms to obtain, collect and analyze user data and feedback information from Web sites. In order to create new user value and business value.

Lights of War. Michael Ondaatje

From the first sentence let a person indulge! A novel of secrecy and loss, Ondaatje’s best work. — Publishers Weekly

Why didn’t the Shrink Tell Me? By Edmund Bourne

This book is a practical guide for those who are struggling with panic attacks, agoraphobia, social anxiety, generalized anxiety disorder and obsessive-compulsive behavior.

The Google Work Act [Bo] Peter Felix Grzywach

Why don’t productive people use email? Why is it that you work so hard, but you never get it done, and it doesn’t go well? The book teaches 57 core techniques, all of Google’s secrets to productivity, all at once.

Fei Xiaotong’s Late Years (1981-2000) recorded by Zhang Guansheng

The book is written in simple but profound language, which truly records Fei’s tireless work in nearly two decades, covering all parts of China except Tibet and Taiwan. But all this is not a superficial official inspection, but the real investigation, and hope to find problems from the wing, think of ways, for the common people to find a way out, true presentation of the great intellectual to save the people and help the world.

A Brief History of Mankind. [to] Yuval Harari

The representative works of yuval Harari, a new Israeli historian, describe the human development history of capital and science and technology from the beginning of life 100,000 years ago to the 21st century, weaving science and history together, and illustrating the development history of Homo sapiens on earth from a new perspective.

Julie Zhuo, Hardcore Promotion

The workplace doesn’t care who you are, it cares how hardcore you are. From an intern at Facebook to managing a team of several hundred people, Julie Zhuo took an unusual path to the top. When She first immigrated to the United States, Julie Zhuo knew nothing about Star Wars or E.T. and took “Silicon Valley” literally. Julie Zhuo, 25, who rose to become a product manager at Facebook, stared down a long list — from hiring to firing, sending emails to organizing meetings, product to marketing — of thousands of problems to solve that left her feeling anxious and confused. She began to think about her promotion and how to cope and solve these problems. Now, she has run facebook’s team for nearly a decade, leading the team that designed the interface so that more than 2 billion people can use it by clicking the blue icon on their phones.

Life at 100: Living and Working in the Age of Longevity by Lynda Gratton and Andrew Scott

No matter who you are or how old you are, you must face the basic fact that people born at the beginning of the 21st century have a 50-50 chance of living to 100. This is already true in developed countries, and developing countries are catching up. This is the age of longevity. If we think that the age of longevity means only aging, delayed retirement, pension shortfalls and labor shortages, our vision is still superficial.

Luo Yihe Love Letter Luo Yihe

Dear readers, the letter you are about to read was written in the 1980s by the poet Luo Yihe. In that glorious era when poetry was regarded as the vanguard, he was the leader of poetry in Peking University and the best poetry editor and critic in Chinese poetry circle in that decade. When his life ended in the 1980s, at the age of 28, he was regarded as the last lyric poet of his time, and in his last year he made a dash for epic poetry that few have yet made.

**** — 【 THE END 】 —

This official account all blog posts have been sorted into a directory, please reply “M” in the official account to obtain!

3T technical resources broadcast! Including but not limited to: Java, C/C++, Linux, Python, big data, artificial intelligence, etc. Reply “1024” in the public account, you can get free!!