January’s selection is a cultural/historical title: The Cathedral & the Bazaar, by Eric S. Raymond. “It may be foolish to consider Eric Raymond’s recent collection of essays, The Cathedral and the Bazaar, the most important computer programming thinking to follow the Internet revolution. But it would be more unfortunate to
Continue readingKrug on Usability Testing vs. Focus Groups
Less than a week until our next meetup! We’ll be talking Steve Krug’s Don’t Make Me Think, Revisited, and we have room for you. There’s still time to grab a copy & read it quick (it is a fast read). Here’s one of the bits he talks about, courtesy of
Continue readingSitePoint review of Don’t Make Me Think
We’re one month out from our next meeting. There’s still plenty of time to grab a copy and read this one with us! Here’s what Kerry Butters wrote about the book on Sitepoint, in a post titled Designer Must Reads: Don’t Make Me Think Revisited: Personally, I keep the book
Continue reading“It’s a Thin Book” – Steve Krug
From the Introduction of Steve Krug’s Don’t Make Me Think, Revisited: We’re reading this for the October 26 meeting; join us!
Continue readingOctober: Don’t Make Me Think, Revisited
October’s selection is back to a technical title, and was the 2nd-place winner from the last poll: Don’t Make Me Think, Revisited (3rd ed.), by Steve Krug: Since Don’t Make Me Think was first published in 2000, hundreds of thousands of Web designers and developers have relied on usability guru
Continue readingMeeting Format Changes
Hi again, everyone! I have some news & changes to let you know about with how the Austin Computer Book Club is run. tl;dr: we’re switching to every other month, moving to 6:30 on Wednesdays or Thursdays, and I’ve set up this website plus accounts on Twitter, Facebook, and Goodreads.
Continue readingPrehistory
A brief history of the meetup prior to the creation of this website: Feb. 2016 – permission granted by ActiveProspect to host meetup at Guadalupe office in Austin, TX Mar. 28, 2016 – first meeting, discussing Your Code As a Crime Scene by Adam Tornhill Apr. 25, 2016 – In
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