Gray's Matter
Justice Gray - North America's favorite metrosexual software consultant
E-mail Justice
Subscribe to this feed
Subscribe to comments
Perennially Popular Posts
How to write a presentation abstract
My grandmother, globalization, and what's wrong with DateTime.Parse
A letter to my Worldvision sponsor child
Development Methodologies for the 21st Century
My grandmother & the difference between strong typing and weak typing
How I am becoming a better developer, part 1 of infinity
Facebook RSS Feeds: How to Write Your Own With C#
The Ten Keys To Happiness
My grandmother and the Global Assembly Cache (And Star Wars)
My grandmother and the difference between processes and threads
How to make a meeting request
Why you should never be an independent consultant
The DasBlog 1.9 AJAX Autosave True Story, Part 2
Other "metro" developers
Ben Scheirman
Bil Simser
D'Arcy Lussier
David Woods
Donald Belcham
Donald Jessop
George Clingerman
James Kovacs
Jason Hunt
Jason Row
Jean-Paul Boodhoo
Jeffrey Palermo
Joey deVilla
John Bristowe
Jonas Avellana
Kyle Baley
Mack Male
Martin Hinselwood
Michael McClenaghan
Mike Duncan
Mike Friesen
Mo Khan
Otyce
RoboSapient
Russell Ball
Scott Hanselman
Scott Reynolds
Steven Rockarts
Tech Embassy
Terry Thibodeau
Tom Opgenorth
Vladimir Levin
The Justice Gray Fan Club
Amazing Mrs. Loquacious
Dr. Teeth
Facedown
Janey Lynne
Maxime Lamy
Ridley Thunder
Stan Woo
Vanilla Con
Wobbly*Bits
I Wish These People Updated More Than Once a Year
Anand Narayan
Jeff Perrin
<< My grandmother and the difference between strong-typing and weak-typing
In 12 weeks, everything changes >>
Beyond Code, The Totally Hetero Review
(This is #1 of #27 in 27 weeks, referenced in my
"How to become a better developer" post
last week.)
Rajesh Setty (of the
"Life Beyond Code" blog
) didn't write
"Beyond Code"
so that he could seduce men and women alike. Rajesh Setty didn't write "Beyond Code" so that a legion of ridiculously masculine men would develop ridiculous man-crushes! Rajesh Setty wrote "Beyond Code" because he cared about software developers and wanted to help them reach their fullest potential - the rest just came as a natural outgrowth of his writing.
I don't know what to tell you about this book. I would almost say it was like the
"How to Win Friends And Influence People"
of the software development industry, but it's so much more than that it's almost insulting to use that comparison. This book is now *tied* with
"Code Complete"
as a book that I think every software developer *must* read at least once - *particularly* if you are an independent consultant (and I'm a total Steve McConnell fanboy, so you know this is saying something). Or alternatively, don't read it at all but at least put a copy of it on your coffee table the next time you're bringing a hot date home - GUARANTEED ACTION.
"Beyond Code", as you'd expect, does not have one iota of code in it. However, what it does have is a wealth of advice on how to stand out - how to stand out to your client, how to stand out among our peers, how to stand out *period*. While the book is focused towards independents the advice is applicable to *anyone* who is doing software development for a living and wants to transcend just being just another code monkey into something more significant. The foreword by Tom Peters says "Read it as if your life depended on it. It DOES!" This isn't hyperbole. It's not a long book at all, but it has a great idea pretty much every second page. I've seriously not had a ROI per page this high in quite a long time of reading.
This being said, there are some reasons you might not want to read Beyond Code:
you don't want to threaten your marriage or relationship by introducing Rajesh Setty and his prose into it
you don't like getting aroused as you're reading software dev books, unless you're reading Code Complete
you feel stressed out when you are chased by hordes of the opposite sex wanting to offer themselves to you in the worst way
same as point #3, but substitute "clients" or "employers" for "the opposite sex"
Last week, we had a
lively discussion on career security
on this blog; if you read this book, take its advice to heart and truly implement it's advice, I am almost 100% certain
career security is never going to be one of your problems
. Nor will getting some, for that matter!
If you are at all familiar with my scale for rating books (see the
bottom of this post
for an explanation), then you know that the rating for this book is academic. No matter how depraved, no matter how undignified, there is *NOTHING* I wouldn't do with this book! All the way for CERTAIN, even if the only thing I've have the next morning is a goodbye note on the pillow along with some scars and memories to haunt my sleepless nights! And trust me, sleepless nights are all you're going to get after reading this!
There's no escaping that penetrating stare...
BUY IT AS SOON AS POSSIBLE
. Then, once you've done that, *read it* as soon as possible!
* I would like to assure my readership that despite this, yours truly is still
FIRMLY HETEROSEXUAL
Monday, April 23, 2007
Comments [4]
BookReviews
|
Productivity
|
Technical
|
Tracked by:
"Head First Design Patterns and the dark confession of a lifetime" (Gray's Matte...
[Trackback]
Gray's Matter
[Trackback]
"Martin Fowler's Refactoring - the book that brought me *back to life*" (Gray's ...
[Trackback]
"How I am becoming a better developer, part 1 of infinity" (Gray's Matter)
[Trackback]
"Sunshine" (Gray's Matter)
[Trackback]
"Applying UML and Patterns: They can't all be winners" (Gray's Matter)
[Trackback]
4/23/2007 1:16:37 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Dude, with a write up like this, I think I have to read this book. Interested in a book swap/trade? I happen to own some of the books on your list. However, I think that I should have the books laminated before handing them over to you. It sounds like you get a bit to...excited...
Tom Opgenorth
4/23/2007 1:23:05 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I just asked my boss to get two copies of this book so I should be reading it shortly. We'll see if I have the same heterosexual opinion you do after I read it. I'm really glad you're doing this Justice, thanks for giving back to the community. Greatly appreciated.
George
|
clingermangwAT NOSPAMhotmail dot com
4/23/2007 2:09:43 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Hey, it's no problem for me, George - I loved the book and am happy to recommend it. Coming up in the next couple of weeks, I'll actually be doing some blog posts about specific things in Beyond Code that got me thinking! I definitely hope you enjoy the book.
Justice
4/24/2007 3:26:07 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Justice, this is a great/hilarious write-up! You had me laughing the whole time--but it's true what you say--every bit of Rajesh's insight is invaluable. I had the great opportunity to meet and interview Raj a few months back, and he is one of the kindest people I know, with innumerable great ideas for how to do all the daily things we do BETTER! I've learned so much from him.
Thanks for recommending the book. I highly recommend it to--for anyone working on building their personal brand, not just programmers. I guess I have a man-crush...
-Cody
Cody McKibben
|
codyAT NOSPAMcodymckibben dot com
Name
E-mail
Home page
Remember Me
Comment (HTML not allowed)
Enter the code shown (prevents robots):
Justice Gray
: a seething cauldron of rampaging masculinity. A fighter! A brother! Your
secret lover
! He's also a software development consultant and the Vice President of the
Edmonton .NET user group
. He also greatly enjoys speaking about himself in the 3rd person.
Gray's Matter Archives
Recent Posts
Controversy clarifications!
The most controversial interview of ALL TIME
Finally! The *winner* of the "What Justice Gray Means to Me" contest
The mystery of D'Arcy Lussier's ASP.NET MVP is solved...
Well, now that's pretty horrifying
MVPs on MVC: "No, we don't have any idea either"
Why I am happy to not be at the MVP Summit
Donald Belcham's cry for help: MS MVPs, your attention is needed
ALT.NET Pursefighting revealed
Test, please ignore!
Change yourself, change the world: a great week 4
Post Categories
BookReviews
Conferences
DasBlog
EDMUG
Goals
HanselmanQuestions
HotDeveloperCorner
ILiveToInform
Leadership
Mac
OtherGrayAreas
Personal
Productivity
Ruby
Suresh
Technical
Transformers
Vancouver
Wii
<
July 2008
>
Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
29
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Sign In