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Who is the guy you try to follow, who you read his blog, buy his books. In short, who is THE SOFTWARE EXPERT to follow in your oppinion?

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Let's not forget Jon Skeet! :-)

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Eric Sink.

Looks like everyone out here missed Eric Sink. His business of software and marketing for geeks articles are great!!

My other favs are Joel Spolsky, Jeff Atwood and lately, Steve Yegge.

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joel spolsky. which kind of gave me a new perspective of business of software.

a dream where programmers are the main stars and not just tools for business people to have their way with..

although i'm mostly referring to his old materials... hehe but we still love em.

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To me, Joel Spolsky has been a great influence. I've started as a technical entrepreneur mostly influenced by his writings and thought process.

Let me see if I am as successful as him.. :)

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Watts Humphrey

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Noel Llopis - I really love his ideas about Agile development and TDD. After reading all of the articles on his blog, I really understood how interesting, simple and complex at the same time programming can be.

Also, after reading UnitTest++ source code (which was developed by Noel and his colegue Charless), I got really interested in TDD. That change my point of view completely, because before that, I thought that unit tests are a big waste of time. Look at me now - I'm writing tests before I the code it's testing.

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T. V. Raman. I'm at a loss for words trying to express my admiration.

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My mum. I wouldn't say she was a legendary programmer, but she was a single mum of two rambunctious boys and she still inspires me today. Even in a field she knows precious little about she's had a huge impact on the way I code, the standards I hold for myself and for those around me, my approach to the way I work and in fact for my entire work ethic. She ingrained a bunch of anecdotes in my head my whole life that I think many people could benefit from:

"If you're not going to make the effort to do a job well and give it your best, you're wasting everyone's time. Not only that but you're letting yourself down by not meeting the standards you're capable of."

"You waste far more time fixing things you do wrong, so take your time, be careful and do it right the first time."

"Always surround yourself with those that are better at what you do than you are. You can't learn from someone who has nothing to teach."

There are a whole bunch more, but I won't bore you all to tears. As far as technical programming influences, go I don't think I have any one single influence. There are many great books that collaborate on such subjects:

  • Steve McConnell - Code Complete
  • Andy Oram - Beautiful Code
  • Scott Berkun - Myths of Innovation
  • Scott Rosenberg - Dreaming in Code: Two Dozen Programmers, Three Years, 4,732 Bugs, and One Quest for Transcendent Software

I think some of the ideals in these books are ideals that all programmers should aspire to. After all, between us we have the intellectual potential to make far greater leaps in technology than most of the world - why shouldn't we hold ourselves to such standards?

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My own list is composed from author whose blogs or books I read, in no particular order:

IMHO, for C++, no one can hope reach a decent level of C++ expertise without reading H. Sutter and S. Meyers books. Almost the same goes for Win32 and R. Chen's blog.

Note that since SO's public appearance, I read a lot less those said blogs, or even my prefered webcomics... :-/

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A number of people have had an influence on me and my programming, each in their own way. The most significant names that comes to mind: Brian Goetz, Steve McConnel, Cliff Click, Edsger Wybe Dijkstra.

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Ward Cunningham - for the wiki, XP and CRC (with Kent Beck)

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Dave Thomas & Andy Hunt - pragmatic programmers

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I admire and look up to a lot of developers, so it feels kind of crappy to only be able to point to a few. One I haven't seen on this list yet is Raymond Chen. I'm also somewhat surprised to not see Jeff Atwood here, either!

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Joel Spolsky

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Scott Hanselman, but which one I don't know. Because that guy must have clones of himself running around giving talks and doing things like sleep, while the true hanselman hides away in a shack in Montanta with two T1 lines and the newest IBM supercomputer. ;-)

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John Carmack

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Steve Yegge- Because of his blog I gained an insight into what I was missing by not studying CS fundamentals and also it helped me plot a path to become more knowledgeable. Thanks Steve!

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Without a doubt, Steve McConnell. I've read most of his books, and they range from decent to classic. Most of them are classics. My two favorites are Code Complete (either edition) and Software Estimation.

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Though if I had to pick one, it'd be Guido van Rossum, the inventor and ongoing benevolent dictator of Python.

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No one individual. While there are plenty of luminaries in our field, who have done truly great things, I think it's far better to learn from them all, than elevate one above the rest.

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Simon Peyton-Jones

Simon Peyton-Jones

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Neil Gershenfeld, head of MIT's Center for Bits and Atoms. I attended a "exposition" he gave at CLEI 2007 (Conferencia Latinoamericana en Informatica) and he definitely blew me away. He's also got a couple of books, but I have yet to check them out... also he had some ties to a professor of mine from the computer architecture course, and it also cemented my admiration towards him.

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Alan Kay and Dan Ingalls

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Paul Graham. I tend to disagree with him on technical details but he's probably the biggest influence on my thought processes and business decisions.

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Sartaj Sahni, professor I had 2 times in school who took a lot of personal time with his students and demanded that we constantly use our heads in even the very small decisions we made in our code.

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Erik Meijer

Erik Meijer

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A former boss that I had back some 20 years ago, who, in my opinion, was the smartest man I have ever met personally. While I am sure there are those who are as smart or smarter, this guy taught me simple, basic, logic and problem solving. Stuff that would apply to any environment or language, database, etc. Got to work with him for 7 years and I know that even to this day I apply things which he's taught me.

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Herb Sutter

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When I was starting out as a Unix programmer, I scrimped and saved to buy the Steven's Books ("Advanced Programming in the Unix Environment" is still on the bookshelf beside my desk, I think I lost "TCP/IP Illustrated" somewhere along the way). Mark Rochkind (I think that was his name) wrote a good book about Unix programming, and I remember talking to him at Usenix in the late 1980s.

Another big influence was Henry Spencer, both reading his posts on comp.lang.c and reading the source code for C-News and AWF. He was at the same Usenix, but he was a bit of a dick in person.

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Rocky Lhotka (Blog) (Books)

His "Business Objects" books really renewed my interest in following the path of greater programming enlightenment.

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