Having received payment for my latest one off project today, I celebrated by going down to Wheelock Place and splurging on a Starbucks Venti Dulce de Leche from next door and buying some computer books I’ve been dying to get. I’m a wild guy you see.

Happiness is a stack of new interesting computer books!
I find that I learn new skills much faster if I’m given examples and real world applications of technologies rather than just the usual “an array is a collection of objects yada yada” theory. The O’Reilly Cookbooks are absolutely fantastic for this, what irritates me is that I only just discovered them recently when I had to learn Python in a hurry for an assignment. I learned more from that one book than many hours sifting through tutorial pages and the dry slides from the uni.
As for the FreeBSD book, heck I just wanted to see how it works! Perhaps a little over my head right now, but we’ll be looking at the Linux kernel at some point so this could be an interesting side study for comparison.
From the blurbs:
- The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System
- As in earlier Addison-Wesley books on the UNIX-based BSD operating system, Kirk McKusick and George Neville-Neil deliver here the most comprehensive, up-to-date, and authoritative technical information on the internal structure of open source FreeBSD.
- Perl Cookbook
- Find a Perl programmer, and you’ll find a copy of Perl Cookbook nearby. Perl Cookbook is a comprehensive collection of problems, solutions, and practical examples for anyone programming in Perl. The book contains hundreds of rigorously reviewed Perl “recipes” and thousands of examples ranging from brief one-liners to complete applications.
- Ruby Cookbook
- The Ruby Cookbook is the most comprehensive problem-solving guide to today’s hottest programming language. It gives you hundreds of solutions to real-world problems, with clear explanations and thousands of lines of code you can use in your own projects. From data structures and algorithms, to integration with cutting-edge technologies, the Ruby Cookbook has something for every programmer.
And now I’m off to bed. 00:07, that’s pretty early for me!



A couple days ago we went to a Costa Coffee, and went to bookstore in the same mall, buying two books “Beyond Prozac” and “Beating the Booze”. On my way out the door the girl at the checkout called me back to give me a receipt “in case you have any promlems”.
books are worth of investment :) dying also to get linux, bsd and solaris books.