Hello, programmers, today is April 23rd, World Book Day.

The main content of this issue is:

“Growth hackers meet field painters to welcome them to Silicon Valley.” “The moon reaches the top of the wave, meets sixpence in triumph.” “A Brief History of Information editorial: This is the final roar, Unite until tomorrow.”

See the details below:

Recommended by: Batten

Recently, programmers against the 996 movement in full swing, is Shouting, or watching from a distance, or cynical? Whatever your attitude, it is recommended that you take some time to read this book carefully. Even if you have read it before, it is still worth rereading.

Hackers and painters is silicon valley startups godfather Graham corpus before 2004, although it has been 15 years, but most of them still not outdated content, the author expounds in a relaxed and concise language good programmers with his heart, other people, the Internet, wealth, job, programming languages, such as the relationship between the transaction, In particular, clarifying the nature of these relationships, whether you agree with him or not, will at least help you improve your understanding of what matters most to programmers in the world, and perhaps help you form your own independent judgment in the fight against 996.

Recommended by: Dengyang

IDDD is Vaughn Vernon’s answer to how to put domain-driven design into practice. Technicians can learn from this book how to stand at a higher level to understand the business, disassemble requirements, and effectively design business models when faced with complex business scenarios and multi-team collaboration, demarcating boundaries and reducing unnecessary wrangles. If you’re currently on a team that needs technology to support the business well enough to win first, but doesn’t want to get sucked into pure business development, you’ll take inspiration from this book.

Recommender: In winter

Looking for a relaxing, lazy weekend with a less hardcore read? But always want to say a little bit of program and “ape” things, and don’t seem too water? . How appropriate it would be to glean even a little wisdom from it! Ok! So! This book is for you! Must have! To prepare! !!!! And by the end of it, you can feel the muscles in your face, which I’m sure will be cramping with laughter — it’s just like a programmer’s stand-up comedy show, but in a very classy way.

Steve Yegge, a 20-year veteran of Amazon and Google, is well known in the industry for his signature blog. The book takes a look at all the languages and deconstructs many of the classic programming philosophy topics. Before you know it, you’ll pick up some great ideas and go back to the spring when you first learned to program — and how “fun and talented” it was

Recommended by: Jifeng

The three pillars of human civilization are matter, energy and information. Now we are in the information age, and we are flooded with information, and each of us, like a molecule of water, has become a part of the flood. This makes us nervous, tired and anxious. A Brief History of Information gives us a wonderful history of people and information from different perspectives, and gives us better ideas on how to cope with the current information explosion. Overall, a Brief History of Information is not just about computer science, but an encyclopaedia of information, well worth reading over fragmented time.

Referrer: Jing Wei

“To do what you want to do most, to live the life you want, to find peace with yourself, how can you make yourself cheap? To be a famous surgeon, to earn ten thousand pounds a year, to marry a beautiful wife, is success? I think it depends on how you look at the meaning of life, what you want from society, what you want from yourself.”

Recommended by: LAN Hao

Silicon Valley Growth Hacker Notes is a methodological book that teaches people how to fish. It’s not just for growing businesses, it’s also for other businesses. This book teaches us how to find and disassemble the Polaris index, and then, in a data-driven way, continually test and verify to find the optimal solution. For new business, it is particularly important. As technical students, this methodology can help us to have a deep understanding of the business, so that we can use the technical means we are best at to solve the core problems. In this way, both process efficiency and results will come faster and more than ever before.

Referee: Tong Hui

The book starts from the basics of deep learning, and then goes into TensorFlow framework principles, model building, source code analysis, network implementation and other aspects. There are three parts: the basic part, the actual combat part and the improvement part.

Firstly, the basic chapter explains the basic principles of deep learning, and analyzes the TensorFlow source code in simple terms through some simple codes.

Secondly, the practical part explains how to realize CNN, RNN and other networks, and uses MNIST data set to realize handwritten text recognition, and explains the application of TensorFlow in face recognition.

The TensorFlow API is relatively old because it changes quickly, but it provides a solid foundation for further complex functionality. This is a classic textbook for beginners.

Recommended by: Yang Yu

Top of the Wave is a book that introduces the rise and fall of the Internet and the IT industry, including AT&T, IBM, Cisco, Microsoft, Apple, Google, Facebook, Dell, etc. IT is regarded as “a must read for all young people who want to enter the IT industry”. The development of the Internet and IT industry is a wave of waves. “Top of the Wave” connects seemingly discrete IT companies into a whole with the main line of “waves”, which explains to us that the success and failure of each company has its own inevitable factors. Definitely a good book to read again and again.

(* Recommended order: Big Guy Flower Pinyin)

As the saying goes, if you have read 300 tang poems, you can sing them even if you can’t write them.

After all, life is not just about Coding, but poetry and bugs 🙂

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Old code more = over-coupling =if else? “Engineer Ali said