Showstopper!
The Breakneck Race to Create Windows NT and the Next Generation at Microsoft
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
This “inside account captures the energy—and the madness—of the software giant’s race to develop a critical new program. . . . Gripping” (Fortune Magazine).
Showstopper is the dramatic, inside story of the creation of Windows NT, told by Wall Street Journal reporter G. Pascal Zachary. Driven by the legendary David Cutler, a picked band of software engineers sacrifices almost everything in their lives to build a new, stable, operating system aimed at giving Microsoft a platform for growth through the next decade of development in the computing business.
Comparable in many ways to the Pulitzer Prize–winning book The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder, Showstopper gets deep inside the process of software development, the lives and motivations of coders and the pressure to succeed coupled with the drive for originality and perfection that can pull a diverse team together to create a program consisting of many hundreds of thousands of lines of code.
Customer Reviews
Not so great
This book tells the story of a software development project through a series of anecdotes focused on some of the individuals involved. It veers towards hagiography at times. If you’re really interested in the software (Windows NT and later), you won’t find anything interesting about it here. If you’re interested in software development, or how to manage a large project, there are plenty of books on it, of which this isn’t one. If you’re interested in the development of new technologies, I’d recommend The Soul of a New Machine.