Review of The EventStorming Handbook
I really like how Paul Rayner broke up the book into 3 sections – Ingredients, Recipes, and Cooking. Those analogies are familiar and make sense. The first part talks about…
Helping techies grow throughout their careers
I really like how Paul Rayner broke up the book into 3 sections – Ingredients, Recipes, and Cooking. Those analogies are familiar and make sense. The first part talks about…
While the edition from LeanPub is unfinished, it contains a wealth of information to get started with EventStorming. From explaining the process, the supplies, patterns and anti-patterns, and describing the…
What I liked:– Easy-to-follow process on how to use domain storytelling– Great recommendations for analog and digital approaches– Relatable examples and stories to showcase how to use it– Clear examples…
I first read this shortly after it came out and remember liking it. But many years later, as I reread it, I found it as a tale of Parts Unlimited…
Quick read full of lots of ideas on incorporating kaizen into your life – both professionally and personally. As the subtitle suggests, this book offers many small steps that you…
Smaller batches, shorter feedback loops, focusing on capabilities and outcomes rather than maturity, the impacts of DevOps on culture… how DevOps can help reduce the risk of burnout… so many…
This book gives a lot of insight into dependency injection and inversion of control – both in terms related to .NET and in general. It points out common patterns that…
Quick read on leadership and quiet leaders, those who work behind the scenes in solving some of the toughest problems. I’m glad I picked up this book, as it really…