vBulletin FAQ
The website where you learn about vBulletin Forums
Home   Download vBulletin   vBulletin FAQ Forums vBulletin Related Sites Contact Us
Welcome to vBulletin FAQ

vBulletin FAQ Navigation

Getting Started

Customizing your vBulletin

Search Engines & SEO

Making Money with a Forum

Promoting your Community

Get your own vBulletin Today


Webmaster Help


Joel on Software: And on Diverse and Occasionally Related Matters That Will Prove of Interest to Software Developers, Designers, and Managers, and to Those Who, Whether by Good Fortune or Ill Luck, Work with Them in Some Capacity





vBulletin Book Store > vBulletin books beginning with J

More details of book titled: Joel on Software: And on Diverse and Occasionally Related Matters That Will Prove of Interest to Software Developers, Designers, and Managers, and to Those Who, Whether by Good Fortune or Ill Luck, Work with Them in Some Capacity

Joel on Software: And on Diverse and Occasionally Related Matters That Will Prove of Interest to Software Developers, Designers, and Managers, and to Those Who, Whether by Good Fortune or Ill Luck, Work with Them in Some Capacity

Author: Joel Spolsky
Published: 2004-08-02
List price: $24.99
Our price: $16.49
Usually ships in 24 hours
As of: October 14th, 2008 03:56:18 AM
Customer comments on this selection.

vBulletin Survives the test of time
In a domain where 6 months is a lifetime, this book has survived the test of time remarkably well. Joel brings to bear his experience as a programmer, program manager and software company CEO in this series of articles on the software development business.

The book rambles through topics ranging from strategy to programming to project management. The strategy and project management topics are as fresh and applicable today as when they were written. The programing technology topics are relevant, but take some abstracting - "Knowing how to dig down into the details" has different details today than when the essays were originally written.

Even if you don't agree with 100% of what Joel says, the book should be included in the reading list of most programmers, program managers and software company executives.


vBulletin Lots of interesting thoughts

Joel on Software is a collection of Joels blog posts. There are maybe 40 posts and the book is about 350 pages. Making all posts independent makes it easy to pick up the book every now and then, read one, and move on.

Joel has an opinion on everything and a fairly strong one. He is an excellent writer and is able to convey his opinion often in a humorous way. I very often completely disagree with his opinion, but that did not make the book any less valuable. He writes his opinion and clarifies the argumentation. He writes it in such a way that I find it worth reading.

There are too many posts to summarize. Some of the really great ones are, "the joel test" which he explains how you can be a better programming. "Daily builds are your friends" in which he covers the importance of daily builds. "The law of the leaky abstractions" is a true classic explaining that our industry keeps abstracting but that non of these abstractions is absolute so therefore the total amount of knowledge a person needs to know will increase. "Two stories" which describes the difference between two companies in their culture. And it goes on and on.

I really recommend to get Joel on Software (or his new More Joel on Software) and just, every now and then, read one of the posts and reflect about his opinion. Great work.


vBulletin Outstanding Essays On Software Development
Sometimes blunt, yet always pragmatic, Joel's writing is crisp and to the point. It should be required reading for IT managers and developers building software apps. The Joel Test has also become the de facto litmus test used by programmers to rate software organizations.

vBulletin Considerable wisdom, occasionally dated
Joel Spolsky's collected essays and blog entries mostly remain fresh enough even after several years (some go back to 2000 and 2001). Many of the good ideas he presents are still valid because they are still true and they remain challenges for many people and organizations today.

The more dated parts relate more to specific technology, such as COM and early browser versions. That's usually ok, as the specific references serve more as hooks for making a point. Plus, agile methodologies have made significant progress since Spolsky published. He gets a few digs in against Extreme Programming. I was unfamiliar with his blog before this book, and one thing nice is that his insight and spunkiness make we want to sample his blog going forward.

I especially agree with Spolsky on most of his "Joel's test", the need for modest specs (disagree on use of humor in specs), daily builds, fine-grained scheduling, the need to understand fundamentals of what's going on in your system, independent testers, scalability and understanding your market. That's a pretty good collection of topics.

Sorry, but at this point the book made for a good read from the library, as opposed to a purchase.


vBulletin Very interesting for every programmer
I bought this book for my husband who mostly sits 24-7 coding and even if he sleeps then he dreams in code.

This books is actually archive of Joel's messages (can i call it blog) on his website.

Easy and sometimes funny to read, also technical but at least smth apart.

Will buy other books from Joel also


Our vBulletin book picks:


Find more vBulletin related products of interest.

Search:
Keywords:
Amazon Logo

Purchase vBulletin - Site Map - vBulletin Forum
Copyright © 2006 vBulletin-FAQ.com. All rights reserved.
This website is not affilliated with Jelsoft or vBulletin.
Forums - Archive