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Solid Explanation Of Why Knowing The Basics Of Software Development Is Essential In Modern Life. Full disclosure up front: My degree is in Computer Science. I actually started the program at 16 years old and was already going into Programming 3 by the time I graduated high school. I spent over three years in college as a Programming 1 tutor, having never made less than a 95 on *any* assignment or test - including the handwritten final exam - in Programming 1. I was a middle school/ high school teacher for a year before spending the last 18 years as a professional software developer building everything from credit card processing applications at a Fortune 50 megacorporation to various medical billing systems to even a couple of stints at the Savannah River Site as a nuclear software engineer on various projects, including one that informed the chemical engineers of when any one of a couple dozen nuclear waste tanks ranging in size from a few hundred thousand gallons to over a million gallons were about to explode within 24 hours if they didn't act in time.

All that to say, obviously, I love my craft. I'm a 25+ year student of this industry as well as practitioner, and I've learned, done, and seen quite a bit. I *know* how critical my industry is to modern life.

Here, Arbesman does a truly remarkable job of explaining to everyone *else* what I've known for quite some time. No matter your background outside of software development - including those non-coders inside of the more general Information Technology industry - Arbesman does a truly great job of explaining the basics of coding and why it is important to modern life - both for good and ill - in such a way that it is both easily approachable and easily understandable by pretty well anyone who can read at all.

Reasonably well documented - at least by my more recent, more relaxed standards - at 15% or so, this book explains the wonders and pitfalls of this industry in ways that will make most anyone understand just how critical it is and why it is critically important that they have at least some understanding of it... and also make those of us who have been in the trenches for quite some time come to love what we do all over again. It is both informed and inspiring, and while it doesn't go into all of the complexities of the field, it does give a solid overview of at least a lot of the key issues in such a way that it invites the reader to discover even more about this industry.

Overall a great book for anyone, and seemingly destined to be at minimum suggested reading - if not required - in perhaps a lot of Computer 101 courses in college or even high school.

Very much recommended.

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I liked this book! It was a bit dense and fact/teaching straightforward and heavy, but it was still super informative and I learned a lot!. I like the comparisons this book made, and how it was still understandable

Thank you to NetGalley, to the author, and to the publisher for this complimentary ARC in exchange for my honest review!!!

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