[LRUG] Architecture Of Things
Sam Livingston-Gray
geeksam at gmail.com
Fri Sep 25 13:10:50 PDT 2015
This is more of a general recommendation, but: if podcasts fit into your
life in some way (I listen to them while I do dishes or fold laundry), I
highly recommend going through the Ruby Rogues back catalog. There are
well over 200 episodes now, so you may want to pick and choose, but there
are some absolutely amazing nuggets of learning sprinkled throughout. I
particularly liked "How to Learn", and the ones with Sandi Metz and Tom
Stuart as guest Rogues.
-Sam
On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 5:53 AM, Zoltan Biber <zoltan.biber at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I’m working with Ruby / Rails for about 1.5 years now, loving the
> language, the framework and the open source world but as I work on a
> complex app at my job
> it is always the stack/architecture of things that can be difficult to
> master (e.g. the order in which code is executed in the stack). Would be
> keen to hear some opinions from fellow LRUG-ers:
>
> 1. Can you suggest a good book on Software Engineering / Software
> Architecture suitable as a first read on the topic?
> Fresh stuff that is up-do-date with SOA,Microservices and Cloud
> Computing would be great.
> It looks to me that the above have (completely) changed the ballgame
> but I might be wrong and the core fundamentals are absolutely the same?
> Bonus: Is there a good book covering s. architecture built around
> Ruby/Rails? Or is that clashing with the generalist (language agnostic)
> approach of s.engineering?
> I tend to find loads of tutorials that tell you WHAT to do and HOW but
> not so much about the WHY (in the grand scheme of things).
>
> 2. How did any of you guys transition from a newbie to that engineer level
> stating the year when you started from zero and education.
> Here we have to distinguish between people starting web development in
> the ‘old days’ and ’nowadays’ because
> in the old days people had the pain of not having the plethora of
> tools/documentation/tutorials available today but also the luxury of
> learning a
> new tool/technology incrementally as the number of moving parts was
> much less and new tools were not released by minute.
>
>
> Thank you,
> Zoltan
>
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