Current best selling books on object technology
Object Technology: A Manager's Guide
by David A. Taylor
Average Customer Review:
based on 31 reviews.
Customer Review: Note that, although the subtitle for this text implies Taylor's audience is solely managers, this book is suitable for anyone looking for a concise introduction to object-oriented software technology. Simply ignore some of the negative comments in other reviews regarding this book's viability in relation to early 21st-century softwa...
by David A. Taylor
Average Customer Review:
Customer Review: Note that, although the subtitle for this text implies Taylor's audience is solely managers, this book is suitable for anyone looking for a concise introduction to object-oriented software technology. Simply ignore some of the negative comments in other reviews regarding this book's viability in relation to early 21st-century softwa...
Surviving Object-Oriented Projects
by Alistair Cockburn
Average Customer Review:
based on 11 reviews.
Customer Review: This book is essential reading for anyone interested in running an OO project, or for anyone who simply wants a balanced view of OO development. Unlike most other OO authors I've encountered, Alistair Cockburn is not interested in selling OO as the answer to all our prayers, but uses a wealth of case studies to show us the limits, p...
by Alistair Cockburn
Average Customer Review:
Customer Review: This book is essential reading for anyone interested in running an OO project, or for anyone who simply wants a balanced view of OO development. Unlike most other OO authors I've encountered, Alistair Cockburn is not interested in selling OO as the answer to all our prayers, but uses a wealth of case studies to show us the limits, p...
What Every Software Manager Must Know to Succeed with Object Technology (SIGS: Managing Object Technology)
by John Williams
Average Customer Review:
based on 1 review.
Customer Review: This book was only written a precious few years ago, but it has aged an entire lifetime! Look at "Surviving Object-Oriented Projects" by Alistair Cockburn for an updated tome.
by John Williams
Average Customer Review:
Customer Review: This book was only written a precious few years ago, but it has aged an entire lifetime! Look at "Surviving Object-Oriented Projects" by Alistair Cockburn for an updated tome.
Object Technology Made Simple
by Mory Bahar
Average Customer Review:
based on 1 review.
Customer Review: As a beginning software engineering student, making the jump from procedural programming to the object-oriented paradigm has been difficult for me. This book really helped me understand object technology and what it means. It explains things very simply and effectively, and with refreshing wit and humor, using real-world examples. The...
by Mory Bahar
Average Customer Review:
Customer Review: As a beginning software engineering student, making the jump from procedural programming to the object-oriented paradigm has been difficult for me. This book really helped me understand object technology and what it means. It explains things very simply and effectively, and with refreshing wit and humor, using real-world examples. The...
OBJECT-ORIENTED SOFTWARE CONCEPTS (A Technology Manager's Guide To The State-Of-The-Art)
by Ph.D. MICHAEL WORKMAN
Publisher: CORBA
Publication Date: June 2005
by Ph.D. MICHAEL WORKMAN
Publisher: CORBA
Publication Date: June 2005
Object Success : A Manager's Guide to Object-Oriented Technology And Its Impact On the Corporation (Prentice Hall Object-Oriented Series)
by Bertrand Meyer
Average Customer Review:
based on 1 review.
Customer Review: I now find it is smart business to buy a copy of this book and give it to each prospective client who needs to know why the software industry is on fire on the subject of object-oriented software development. A non-technical manager can read this book and understand object-orientation sometimes better than some of the Techs he or she ...
by Bertrand Meyer
Average Customer Review:
Customer Review: I now find it is smart business to buy a copy of this book and give it to each prospective client who needs to know why the software industry is on fire on the subject of object-oriented software development. A non-technical manager can read this book and understand object-orientation sometimes better than some of the Techs he or she ...
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