Monday, 20 December 2021 |
This book covers the core concepts of programming in C#, including variables, classes, and object-oriented programming. Harrison Ferrone explores the fundamentals of Unity game development, including game design, lighting basics, player movement, camera controls, and collisions. He shows how to write C# scripts for simple game mechanics, perform procedural programming, and add complexity to games by introducing smart enemies and damage-causing projectiles.
<ASIN:1801813949>
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Friday, 17 December 2021 |
This book, subtitled "What You Need to Know to Understand Neural Networks" provides the essential math to follow deep learning discussions, explore more complex implementations, and better use the deep learning toolkits. Ronald T. Kneusel uses Python examples to explain key deep learning related topics in probability, statistics, linear algebra, differential calculus, and matrix calculus as well as how to implement data flow in a neural network, backpropagation, and gradient descent. You’ll also use Python to work through the mathematics that underlies those algorithms and even build a fully-functional neural network.
<ASIN: 1718501900>
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Wednesday, 15 December 2021 |
This book is a comprehensive guide to building microservice applications using the .NET stack. After a crystal-clear introduction to the microservices architectural style, Christian Horsdal Gammelgaard teaches you practical microservices development skills using ASP.NET. This second edition of the bestselling original has been revised with up-to-date tools for the .NET ecosystem, and more new coverage of scoping microservices and deploying to Kubernetes.
<ASIN:1617297925>
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Monday, 13 December 2021 |
This book sets out to teach readers how to advance in their career with the help of expert tips and tricks. Muhammad Asif starts by exploring the different ways of using Python optimally, both from the design and implementation point of view. He then moves to explain the life cycle of a large-scale Python project.
<ASIN:1801070113>
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Wednesday, 08 December 2021 |
You can't afford to make every mistake yourself and this book, subtitled "Lessons from Fifty Years of Software Experience" aims to help you improve faster and bypass much of the pain by learning from others who already climbed the learning curves. Drawing on 25+ years helping software teams succeed, Karl Wiegers has crystallized 60 concise, practical lessons for all your projects, regardless of your role, industry, technology, or methodology.
<ASIN:0137487770>
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Friday, 26 November 2021 |
With its assortment of bricks, motors, and smart sensors, the Lego Mindstorms Robot Inventor set opens the door to a physical-meets-digital world. In this book, Daniele Benedettelli expands that world into an entire universe of fun, uniquely interactive robotic creations. Using the Robot Inventor set and a device that can run the companion app, you’ll learn how to build bots beyond your imagination—from a magical monster that gobbles up paper and answers written questions, to a remote-controlled transformer car that you can drive, steer, and shape-shift into a walking humanoid robot at the press of a button.
<ASIN:1718501811>
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Wednesday, 24 November 2021 |
Programmers think differently from non-programmers, they see and solve problems in a way that the rest of the world doesn't. In this book Mike James takes programming concepts and explains what the skill involves and how a programmer goes about it. In each case, Mike looks at how we convert a dynamic process into a static text that can be understood by other programmers and put into action by a computer. If you're a programmer, his intent is to give you a clearer understanding of what you do so you value it even more.
<ASIN:1871962722>
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Monday, 22 November 2021 |
In this book, Matt Wade and Sven Seidenberg turn their years of engineering and IT experience loose on the virtual collaboration software. The book has step-by-step screen shots that show how to tackle hundreds of Microsoft Teams tasks. Each task-based spread covers a single technique.
<ASIN:1119772540>
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Friday, 19 November 2021 |
This book, subtitled "The Computational Logic of Human Cognition", examines the paradox that human's are incredibly smart and stupid at the same time, with powerful and flexible perception, language, and reasoning but routinely committing errors. Samuel Gershman argues that our cognitive errors are not haphazard. Rather, they are the inevitable consequences of a brain optimized for efficient inference and decision making within the constraints of time, energy, and memory―in other words, data and resource limitations.
<ASIN:069120571X>
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Wednesday, 17 November 2021 |
This book, subtitled "Continuous Delivery with Jenkins, Kubernetes, and Terraform" is a practical guide to automating your development pipeline in a cloud-native, service-driven world. Mohamed Labouardy uses the latest infrastructure-as-code tools like Packer and Terraform to develop reliable CI/CD pipelines for numerous cloud-native applications. With the Pipeline as Code approach, you create a collection of scripts that replace the tedious web UI wrapped around most CI/CD systems.
<ASIN:1617297542>
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Monday, 15 November 2021 |
This book is a guide for beginners to learn the key concepts, real-world applications, and latest features of C# 10 and .NET 6 with hands-on exercises using Visual Studio 2022 and Visual Studio Code. Mark J. Price covers object-oriented programming, writing, testing, and debugging functions, implementing interfaces, and inheriting classes.
<ASIN: 1801077363>
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Friday, 12 November 2021 |
In this book, subtitled "The Art of the Shortcut in Math and Life" Marcus du Sautoy, one of the world's great mathematician,s shows why math is the ultimate timesaver—and how everyone can make their lives easier with a few simple shortcuts. Shortcuts allow us to solve one problem quickly so that we can tackle an even bigger one. They make us capable of doing great things. And according to du Sautoy, math is the very art of the shortcut.
<ASIN:0008393923>
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