#Reviews

  • Design for Hackers by David Kadavy

    Perhaps I was just expecting a lot, lot more from a book that purports to teach Hackers Design and subtitled Reverse Engineering Beauty but, at best, I’d only be able to give DfH an “ok” rating.

    While I was hoping for something that would both illuminate and then directly show how to apply Design learnings from a hacking perspective or even the many, many rues of thumb and underpinnings that define Design, I found the book more a theoretical tour through the underpinnings which often meandered and went off course (I still don’t know why SEO was discussed at length) and was a bit disappointing. A number of any elementary books on visual and information Design could have taken its place and the “for Hackers” in its title seemed marketing hype rather than applicable reality. It did, however, have an excellent section on Typography which I found personally very useful.

  • User Story Mapping by Jeff Patton

    I have to admit I was a bit sceptical going into this book. It seemed to promise a lot with a simple premise and one, frankly, that made solutions to a lot of my product problems way simpler.

    So, I was reading with a bit of scepticism and pleasantly surprised.

    And yet still, despite the fact I think it does sort of approach storymapping from a very ideal direction, and doesn’t get into the weeds of what happens on complex projects or how to untangle a bigger and more problematic project, it does make a clear and compelling case for storymapping helping with the What of needs to be delivered often where quite often the problem is developers using Agile techniques and getting lost in the trees and quagmired in the How of implementing something.

  • The Hard Thing About Hard Things by Ben Horowitz

    Subtitled Building a Business When There Are No Easy Answers, I have to admit I really kind of liked this book. While I don’t agree with everything that Horowitz did in his career at Opsware (and its always easy to Monday morning quarterback someone else’s decisions), the thing I did like about this was its honesty and solid advice on what to do when there are, well… no easy answers.