Ask HN: What single book is the best intro to your field for laypeople?

49 points by capocannoniere ↗ HN

20 comments

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When I was doing Bluetooth Low Energy development for IoT devices, this book was the goto reference for both the embedded firmware and mobile app folks:

https://www.amazon.com/Bluetooth-Low-Energy-Developers-Handb...

May I also ask if you have any more books on embedded devices or IoT devices not specific to just Bluetooth. I'm worked on a research project I led last summer where I fist learned about software and hardware development for small embedded devices like microcontrollers and this year I'm working on another research project using the same technology. I feel as if I understand the technology but am not proficient with it at all. If you have any other resources let me know.
Being Direct by Lester Wunderman is a great intro to the world of direct marketing.
"Getting started with Raspberry Pi" is a wonderful introduction to systems, Linux, and IOT projects. Super approachable language, but also quite complete.
For aspiring fighter pilots: The Right Stuff by Tom Wolfe.
For pure linguistics I'd recommend Transformational Grammar by Andrew Radford and Metaphors We Live By by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson.

And for NLP, Dan Jurafski and James H. Martin's Speech and Language Processing is excellent, and there are great projects like spaCy, NLTK, WordNet, FrameNet, COCA. etc.

As a systems administrator with an eye toward DevOps principles, I highly recommend (the possibly cliché) The Phoenix Project by by Gene Kim, Kevin Behr, and George Spaffor.

It's a novel that reads like a thriller, but is infused with IT info.

Hands down the best book to give an intro into my field: "How to win friends & influence people" by Dale Carnegie.

(I am a startup CEO, w/ technical background. Learnt a LOT from this book. Would probably not be in the same job if I hadn't read this)

Other good books that will give an intro into tech startup management for laypeople:

-Zero to One (Peter Thiel)

-The hard thing about Hard things (Ben Horowitz)

"More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite" by Sebastian Mallaby - this is a great read and motivator for someone interested in quantitative trading systems - started as a side project for me, but looks like it will give me my early retirement + my legacy money to leave behind one day...