Well, I can't document EVERYTHING. But as it turns out, computer books and magazines (and books in general) can be said to be the ONE physical item I collect. Not to keep on a shelf only but to be treasured, read, re-read and/or used.
Ballpark estimate: 132 titles
- including some college textbooks
- not counting my old MCSE training binders
Here's some of my faves:
- Ambient Findability - Daniel J. Barrett (O'Reilly)
- The Art of Deception - Kevin Mitnick
- The Art of Intrusion - Kevin Mitnick
- The Best of 2600: A Hacker's Odyssey - Emmanuel Goldstein (autographed)
- The Code Book - Simon Singh
- Crypto - Steven Levy
- The Cuckoo's Egg - Cliff Stoll
- Dear Hacker: Letters to the Editor of 2600 - Emmanuel Goldstein
- Dreaming in Code - Scott Rosenberg
- Dungeons and Dreamers - Brad King and John Borland
- Extra Lives - Tom Bissell
- Geeks - Jon Katz
- Google Hacking - Johnny Long (coulda written the Long books, sadly)
- Googled - Ken Auletta
- Hackers - Steven Levy
- Hardware Hacking - Joe Grand (autographed)
- In The Beginning Was The Command Line - Neal Stephenson
- Information Trapping - Tara Calishain
- iWoz - Steve Wozniak
- Just For Fun - Linus Torvalds
- Masters of Doom - David Kushner
- Michael Abrash's Graphics Programming Black Book (Special Edition) - Michael Abrash
- The Old New Thing - Raymond Chen
- Phoenix: The Fall and Rise of Video Games - Leonard Herman (autographed)
- Racing The Beam - Nick Montfort and Ian Bogost (autographed)
- Renegades of the Empire - Michael Drummond
- Revolution in the Valley - Andy Hertzfeld
- The Search - John Battelle
- Social Engineering: The Art of Human Hacking - Christopher Hadnagy
- The Soul of a New Machine - Tracy Kidder
- The Ultimate History of Video Games - Steven L Kent
- Upgrading and Repairing PCs: 21st Edition - Scott Mueller (I get a new one every few years, I call it "the Bible". 😀)
- Videogames Hardware Handbook - Retro Gamer (ed.) ("bookazine")
- Weaving The Web - Tim Berners-Lee
- You Are Not A Gadget - Jaron Lanier
Ambient Findability - Daniel J. Barrett - in theory, was simply a book about user experience and structuring data so that it can be easily found. However, I felt there was an underlying subtext that synched well with my own. (non sequitur.)
What I'm reading currently? I picked up an O'Reilly book on MediaWiki most recently.
[ROTT] IanPaulFreeley, read Michael Abrash. I can say I've read all 1342 pages. Understanding? ehhh, maybe 10%. 😀
"I see a little silhouette-o of a man, Scaramouche, Scaramouche, will you
do the Fandango!" - Queen
Stiletto