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Geek Books as Holiday Gifts

Sybelius writes "Wired News is running a story that recommends a half dozen good books as holiday gifts. It's a much more inspired list than the one recently offered by Amazon. According to the reviewer, the books chosen are ones that 'any techno-loving, systems-tinkering, hardware-hacking person would love, but that even those who can't program the clock on their VCR will find quite readable.' Do Slashdot readers have any other recommendations for titles that fit this requirement?"

30 of 202 comments (clear)

  1. Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice in C by glrotate · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice in C

    by James D. Foley, Andries van Dam

    Get a geek interested in graphics and learn from the classic.

    1. Re:Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice in C by fireboy1919 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I wasn't aware that there was anyone who actually felt that three dimensional discrete calculus and C programming are both less difficult to understand than a VCR.

      Go you!

      But if you're going there, why not go ahead and get the master work on algorithms, Numerical Recipes, which is now available in C,C++, and Fortran versions. This, just like your suggestion, is hardcore programmers brainfood, not fluff.

      For softer stuff, may I suggest O'Reilly books about scripting languages? It doesn't really matter which one. Pick one. Ruby, perl, python, etc. They give a good introduction to modern programming libraries, while not getting the newbie bogged down in having to write algorithms that are more complicated than they can deal with.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
  2. Books? That's so 2003! by ErikTheRed · · Score: 4, Informative

    Give them a subscription to Safari.

    --

    Help save the critically endangered Blue Iguana
    1. Re:Books? That's so 2003! by wk633 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      or ACM (www.acm.org) which includes a pretty good online libary. Not as complete as Safari, but a pretty good deal for $99/year.

  3. Referrer flood by emcron · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let the flood of amazon.com referrer links begin! :-) -- Gotta love it when people try to make $0.83 off slashdot

  4. The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide by JNighthawk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    All of my friends have always told me that the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is an awesome book, but I've always had other things on my reading list already. I'm finally done reading the Wheel of Time series and everything by Raymond E. Feist, so I asked for The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide for Christmas. I wonder now, if after hearing "The meaning of life is 42." a million times I'll think it's still funny when reading the books.

    --
    Wheel in the sky keeps on turnin'.
  5. Re:Books are for gays by cbrocious · · Score: 4, Funny

    Thank you sir. If it weren't for non-readers like yourselves (or "non-gays" from your post) we wouldn't have people to pump our gas, wash our windows, and do other trivial but neccesary jobs. I salute you.

    --
    Disconnect and self-destruct, one bullet at a time.
  6. Classics of CS by nkh · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Art of Computer Programming (Donald Knuth) and the dragon book on compilers of course (I'm reading the first and I will buy the second in a few days). If you don't like mathematics, a good book on functional programming will make your brain all warm inside!

    1. Re:Classics of CS by PostItNote · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A new edition of the dragon book is coming out in about a year. It's starting to show its age, my compilers prof says that there aren't any good, current books, and that if you want a good compilers book you should wait until the next edition of the dragon book.

      TAOCP is still great, however.

  7. What I don't like about Safari by baywulf · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you surf too fast through a book they will warn you that a bot may be reading the webpages and they may cancel your account if it happens too often.

  8. Forget tinkering by EEBaum · · Score: 2, Informative

    Get them a good piece of geek fiction. Hitchhiker's Guide, LOTR, Asimov, Arthur C Clarke, etc.

    --
    -- I prefer the term "karma escort."
  9. A Short History of Nearly Everything by plumpy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'd highly recommend Bill Bryson's A Short History of Nearly Everything. I found it because it was one of Powell's "favorite new titles of the season".

    It covers (briefly) the history of the earth, the universe, Physics and Chemistry. If you know your science, you probably won't learn a lot from it, but the fun part is the way he covers the personalities behind all the discoveries. I'd say at least 2/3 of the book is brief biographies of hundreds of people you probably haven't heard of.

    The writing style is very casual, easy to understand even for non-science nerds, and (most surprisingly) pretty funny. It's not very expensive either. I'd reccomend this book to just about anyone with a casual interest in science (even if that interest is so casual that they haven't sought out science books before).

  10. Re:Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by fireboy1919 · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you've got someone who has already read Adam's extremely small collection of works (including HHGTG and the Dirk Gently books, his "we picked up all the clippings of stuff he wrote and put it into a book," and "Starship Titanic" based on his video game), then they might also like Terry Pratchett's books.

    He tells a ripping good yarn, almost all parodies, usually insightful, and always funny. His most famous series is the Discworld books, of which there are 30 or so.

    Reading through these books my favorite author slowly switched from Douglas to Pratchett. The humor style is almost the same, but Pratchett's a little more optimistic about the nature of life, which I find refreshing.

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
  11. poetry? by chocolatetrumpet · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I know this is off the beaten path, but...

    any poetry by Octavio Paz, translated into your native language if you don't speak Spanish.

    I just love his stuff.

    Here's a sample:

    Between going and staying the day wavers,
    in love with its own transparency.
    The circular afternoon is now a bay
    where the world in stillness rocks.

    All is visible and all elusive,
    all is near and can't be touched.

    Paper, book, pencil, glass,
    rest in the shade of their names.

    Time throbbing in my temples repeats
    the same unchanging syllable of blood.

    The light turns the indifferent wall
    into a ghostly theater of reflections.

    I find myself in the middle of an eye,
    watching myself in its blank stare.

    The moment scatters. Motionless,
    I stay and go: I am a pause.

    Translated by Eliot Weinberger

    --
    Spoon not. Fork, or fork not. There is no spoon.
  12. Two classic accessible books by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Cuckoo's Egg
    Takedown

  13. Just a Geek by brasten · · Score: 2, Informative

    Wil Wheaton... Great gift for geeks and non-geeks...

  14. Art of Machinima by gToon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Paul Marino's excellent book on making machinima would be a good Christmas gift for the geeks among us. Not only to you get a superb overview of machinima and it's history, you also get step by step tutorials and all of the programs you need to make your own films on the included CD. I'ts also got a funny, laid-back style that will make you laugh while you are trying to figure out the tutorials. *****

  15. books by Phil246 · · Score: 2

    C++ for dummies
    Java for dummies
    * for dummies ...

  16. Personally by MrHanky · · Score: 3, Informative

    I want The LaTeX Companion by Frank Mittelbach, Michel Goossens et al. LaTeX is a seriously cool piece of software for text publishing -- and far from easy to use, if you want to exploit its full potential (it's not difficult to produce simple but good looking documents, that's almost automagic). From what I've heard, this book is among the best on the subject. Too bad the title makes it sound like a condom.

    So Santa, if you read this: Please, please, please!

  17. What about the classics? by meganthom · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Asimov (maybe I Robot would be a good choice with the crappy movie out), Stephenson, Gibson, Nevin, etc.

    I just started reading Ringworld, and I absolutely love it.

    For the physicist/chemist/engineer in your life, I'd recommend the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. It's a great reference, and a book we would rarely buy for ourselves...

    --
    Live free or die
  18. Some the cool books on my shelf... by JoeCommodore · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Here are some that grace my bookshelf, some may be way out of date. But in genral they are all interesting.

    Computer history & Culture:

    Hackers - Steve Levey (an all time favorite!)

    Fire in the Valley - Frieberger & Swaine (also a favorite)

    Hacker's Dictionary - Eric s. Raymond (give to your techno-poser friends)

    Computer - a history of the information machine - Campbell-Kelly and Asprey

    Digital Deli: The Comprehensive, User-Lovable Menu of Computer Lore, Culture, Lifestyles and Fancy - Lunch Group, Steve Ditlea (late 70s - 80s computer Lore)

    the Compleat Computer - Van Tassel (60s - early 70's computer lore!)

    Tabletop Fare:

    High Score! Illustrated History of Video Games - Osborne Books

    Arcade Treasures - Bill Kurtz (hard to gdet but a good one for arcade buffs)

    Computers - Ain illustrated History - Christian Wurster

    Cookbooks:

    Giga Bites - the official guide to hacker cuisine - Jenz Johnson (hacker oriented recipies)

    Quick Bytes: Computer Lover's Cookbook - Diane Pfifer (more traditional recipies with computerish sounding names)

    Alternative Reading (when you are in tech overload):

    The Big Book of [Urban Ledgends|Hoaxes|Vice|Loosers|Conspiracy| etc.] - Paradox Press (these are comic anthologies covering various fringe subjects, very fun!)

    the Book of Zines, readings from the fringe - Chip Rowe (zines are limited-run home-made magazines, zine anthologies pluck out some of the more interesting/juicy bits).

    ZINES! vols. I and II - V.Vale or V/Search

    Temp Slave - Jeff Kelly (Great for the out of work or recent graduate! from the Zone of the same name))

    Thrift Score - Al Hoff (the guide to being an informed thrifter, from the Zine of the same name)

    For Movie Fans:

    Golden Movie Retriever - Gale Group (love the genre lists in the back)

    the Phsychotronic Video Guide - Michael J Weldon (a good Fringe cinema Guide)

    Nightmare of Ecstasy: Life and Art of Edward D. Wood - Rudolph Grey (about Ed Wood, the most notable hacker of the film industry, his work may not be pretty, but he did it.)

    Some Fiction:

    Colossus, Fall of Colossus, and Colossus & the Crab - D.F. Jones (one of the better computer ruling the world tales).

    Wizard's Bane - Rick Cook (Sword and Sorcery Fantasy with a computer hacker bent, entertaining)

    Microserfs ~ Douglas Coupland (a semi-fictional view of the Microsoft Culture)

    Totally Retro:

    Basic Computer Games (series) - David H. Ahl - (Lots of simple terminal-based BASIC games, maybe give to the PHP/Perl programmer looking to put something fun on thier site)

    Starship Simulation - Roger Garrett (a bold multi-computer Star Trek like, simulation concept written in pseudocode)

    What do you do after you hit RETURN - or the P.C.C.'s First Book of Computer Games - People's Computer Company (retro Whole Earth Catalog meets BASIC Computer Games tabletop fare!)

    --
    "Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
  19. Re:Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 2, Informative

    She can't be that big of a geek if she didn't already own them. BTW, the reason that set is so cheap is because it's missing the fifth volume: Mostly Harmless.

    --
    Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
  20. The Making of the Atomic Bomb by Scott+Ransom · · Score: 3, Interesting

    by Richard Rhodes is one of (if not the ) best book that I have ever read. It has something for everyone, but it is especially suitable for geeks as it details the development of quantum mechanics and atomic physics, before diving into one of the most amazing engineering projects ever undertaken by mankind.

    And it is written incredibly well also.

    Highly recommended.

  21. Too much fiction for me by krumms · · Score: 4, Funny

    As it happens, Ash is an enthusiastic quantum-computing amateur ... a retired British physicist who turns out to be more than 4 billion years old ... Ash modifies his quantum computer into a time machine and teleportation device.

    With the help of his new girlfriend, Melody ...



    Okay, I can believe a basement quantum-computing whiz kid, the 4 billion year old physicist and time travel, but a girlfriend? Pull the other one!
  22. childrens propaganda by ylikone · · Score: 2, Funny

    Nice to the see that the Christmas spirit is alive with you helping out at the shelter by reading extremist right-wing wacko books to the little abused children. You'll have them full of greed and ignorance in no time! Good luck! GO AMERICA!

    --
    Meh.
  23. Transmission by divvy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I would recommend Transmission by Hari Kunzru. It is the story of a virus writer, who unleashes a virus called Leela.exe -named after his favourite bollywood actress, and the actress herself who basks in the new found international glory as the namesake of the virus. Pretty interesting story of body shopping in U.S. and kitchy culture of bollywood.

  24. Games, Linus, & Crypto by McSnickered · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The 3 most enjoyable books I've read in the last five years are:

    1. Masters of Doom - the story of John Carmack & John Romero's creation of the game Doom. From their teenage years to their ultimate breakup (sniff).

    2. Just For Fun by Linus Torvalds - Just a very interesting autobiography about a normal guy who creates a software revolution.

    3. The Code Book - gives a history of cryptography with a lot of great info about modern public-key cryptography. Really fun book.

    --
    They call me the working man. I guess that's what I am.
  25. List of Books for Software Development by under_score · · Score: 2, Informative

    NOTE: blatant self promotion.

    I maintain a list of books and other resources for all sorts of people who work in the software development field including of course, programmers, managers, executives, testers, etc.

    Software Resources

    The list is heavily weighted towards Agile software development.

  26. Godel, Escher, Bach by saddino · · Score: 2, Interesting

    IMHO, there is no better geek book. Sure, it's dated. And sure, it's hefty. But no one has ever so fully embraced the ideas of recursive logic and number theory in sample, in writing and in wit. It's a treasure -- and if you're a geek and haven't read it (or tried to read it) then you don't know what being a geek is.

    On Amazon of course. 777 pages of awesome stuff.

  27. Re:Harry Potter by miyako · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Actually, I'd second this. I spent a lot of time resisting the pressure to read the Harry Potter books, but I finally broke down and borrowed the first book from a friend of mine, and I have to say that now I have the entire series of books, and found them all to be quite enjoyable.
    While the reading level of the books is certainly going to be low, and not present much of a challenge to adult readers, JK Rowling manages to do an amazing job of creating a great story and an immersive world with the limited complexity of the language that she uses. In fact, this is one of the nice things about this series, it's a very easy and at the same time engrossing read, so I can get through a book relatively fast. There is also a lot of very subtle humor in the books, especially the laters ones once the series was proving popular to adults as well as kids, that is clearly targeted at an older audience.
    These books are especially good for people with kids, because it is one of the few book series that the parents and the kids can equally enjoy.

    --
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