Poking And Tweaking
Poking And Tweaking
Originally shared by Noah Friedman
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs was the best book about programming I ever read. I picked it up on my own since I never took any classes which used it. When I heard that MIT stopped using it in their courses I was bewildered and disappointed, but I see where Sussman was coming from, and he's right. Click through to see the video excerpt of him explaining how engineering changed through the 90s.
(An aside: Sussman was the person who got me interested in watchmaking, sort of by chance, during a conversation he had one afternoon in our office.)
http://www.posteriorscience.net/?p=206
Originally shared by Noah Friedman
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs was the best book about programming I ever read. I picked it up on my own since I never took any classes which used it. When I heard that MIT stopped using it in their courses I was bewildered and disappointed, but I see where Sussman was coming from, and he's right. Click through to see the video excerpt of him explaining how engineering changed through the 90s.
(An aside: Sussman was the person who got me interested in watchmaking, sort of by chance, during a conversation he had one afternoon in our office.)
http://www.posteriorscience.net/?p=206
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