Great things and people that I discovered, learned, read, met, etc. in 2014. No particular ordering is implied. Not everything is new.
also: see the lists from 2013, 2012, 2011 and 2010
What happens if you write a TCP stack in Python? Julia Evans answers this question with “something awesome.” I couldn’t agree more.
The Bootstrapped Compiler and the Damage Done Laurence Tratt writes my favorite blog.
How Steve Wozniak Wrote BASIC for the Original Apple From Scratch The title says enough.
The Legend Of Linda Perhacs, ‘A Most Unlikely Rock Star’ Linda Perhacs is a little-known Folk singer who almost disappeared into eternal obscurity. That is, until her music was rediscovered decades after releasing her only album.
Life of a HTTP request, as seen by my toy web server I’ve always thought that programming toys (e.g. compilers, interpreters, servers, etc.) were, like the fruit fly, useful ways to gain a deeper understanding of larger systems within the confines of a constrained tableau.
The problematic culture of “Worse is Better” Well someone had to say it, and I’m glad that it was Paul Chiusano who did.
How I wrote Neuromancer A lovely little vignette by William Gibson about how Neuromancer came to be. The spirit of the article really resonates with my own experience and motivations for helping to write The Joy of Clojure.
ALEC’s a Language for Expressing Creativity - Grant Rettke is building a system on top of Emacs called Alec that is not only a useful tool, but a tool that has informed his very way of thinking. His ongoing journey is told via org-mode-babel files on Github and it’s a joy to read.
Frank Sinatra has a cold a great story from a bygone age about a force of nature.
A Generation Lost in the Bazaar A critical essay about the bazaar model of software development.
The second operating system hiding in every mobile phone Little-known considerations about firmware insecurities in your phone.
Forth Methodology Applied to Programming The title say enough.
What is Gradual Typing from the source
Ramblings on languages and architectures Mike Pall’s mind is open.
I’ve been scaling back on blogging this past year and have tried something different instead - Read-Eval-Print-λove. That said, there were a couple of high-traffic posts on my blog.
10 Technical Papers Every Programmer Should Read (At Least Twice) – My most popular post of 2011 was also my most popular of 2012 and also of 2013 and also of 2014 – go figure.
Timothy Hart, Rest in Peace – Timothy Hart was the father of LISP macros.
Creating Interactive Fiction with Inform7 – Inform7 is a perspective-altering programming language. It’s nearly the pinnacle of languages that are informed (hah) by the types of problems that they’re attempting to solve. Beautiful.
Object Oriented Forth – Honestly, I can’t think of better tech literature available than those written about Forth.
Ruby Under a Microscope – I’ll honestly say that I went into this book expecting the worst. However, I was pleasantly surprised when I was done that the book is a fairly nice dive into the Ruby internals. I’m frankly shocked that a book like this was even published, but once again the long tail reigns supreme; much to our benefit.
Programmer avec Scheme – I read this in a marathon 3-days during Strange Loop 2014 thanks to Nada Amin, who hauled it all the way across the planet for me to read. I’d really love to get another chance to go through it and digest it, but I did like it very much on my first pass. My favorite part was that while the prose was French, the code too was “very French” also!
Ulysses by James Joyce – I finally got around to reading this and wow am I glad that I did. It took me a month to read and tended to dominate my other parallel books at the time, but it was worth the effort. Leopold Bloom is now one of my favorite anti-heroes from fiction.
How Buildings Learn: What Happens After They’re Built – It was this book that made me (finally) realize that some of the best programming books are not about programming at all. As a result I’ve cut back drastically on my “language-specific” programming books1 and have sought programming-relevant books instead.
Feminism Is for Everybody: Passionate Politics – The most lucid outline of feminism that I’ve found so far.
Anarchy and Alchemy: The Films of Alejandro Jodorowsky – I’ve always been an admirer of Jodorowsky’s films and graphic novels, so when I saw the cover I knew that I had to read this. I was not disappointed. The book is filled with spoilers, so beware.
Blindness – Another book that could have been easily subtitled ‘Humans are terrible.’
How to Travel with a Salmon and Other Essays – I couldn’t put this book down. Eco’s wit is impeccable and had me giggling at 2am.
[1
And I’ve made it a personal goal to limit the “language-specific” books to those written before 1995.↩︎