Rating: ****
Tags: Computers, Programming, General, Information Technology, Lang:en
Publisher: Apress
Added: March 28, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
Peter Seibel interviews 15 of the most
interesting computer programmers alive today in
Coders at Work , offering a companion volume to
Apress’s highly acclaimed best-seller
Founders at Work by Jessica Livingston. As the words
“at work” suggest, Peter Seibel focuses on how
his interviewees tackle the day-to-day work of programming,
while revealing much more, like how they became great
programmers, how they recognize programming talent in others,
and what kinds of problems they find most interesting.
Hundreds of people have suggested names of programmers to
interview on the
Coders at Work web site: www.codersatwork.com. The
complete list was 284 names. Having digested everyone’s
feedback, we selected 15 folks who’ve been kind enough
to agree to be interviewed: * Frances Allen: Pioneer in
optimizing compilers, first woman to win the Turing Award
(2006) and first female IBM fellow * Joe Armstrong: Inventor
of Erlang * Joshua Bloch: Author of the Java collections
framework, now at Google * Bernie Cosell: One of the main
software guys behind the original ARPANET IMPs and a master
debugger * Douglas Crockford: JSON founder, JavaScript
architect at Yahoo! * L. Peter Deutsch: Author of
Ghostscript, implementer of Smalltalk-80 at Xerox PARC and
Lisp 1.5 on PDP-1 * Brendan Eich: Inventor of JavaScript, CTO
of the Mozilla Corporation * Brad Fitzpatrick: Writer of
LiveJournal, OpenID, memcached, and Perlbal * Dan Ingalls:
Smalltalk implementor and designer * Simon Peyton Jones:
Coinventor of Haskell and lead designer of Glasgow Haskell
Compiler * Donald Knuth: Author of
The Art of Computer Programming and creator of TeX *
Peter Norvig: Director of Research at Google and author of
the standard text on AI * Guy Steele: Coinventor of Scheme
and part of the Common Lisp Gang of Five, currently working
on Fortress * Ken Thompson: Inventor of UNIX * Jamie
Zawinski: Author of XEmacs and early Netscape/Mozilla
hacker
**