Without knowing what skills you have & which skills interest you, it's difficult to say whether either book will serve you well. But...
The Compilers book would help instill an deep language understanding, possibly improving your coding skills.
The Operating Systems book would help you leverage services provided to you by an operating system.
Neither will directly impact your practical skills; however, both will increase your exposure to important programming fundamentals--improving your intuition, which will help you more quickly develop practical skills.
For practical programming skills (speaking vaguely), I would recommend studying design patterns in the language of your choice. Patterns aren't perfect; however, they represent a significant body of Computer Science and Computer Engineering thought. They will help you understand how others have solved difficult design problems, giving you both design intuition and practical coding skills. You will likely find that patterns increase your organizational skills and your programming breadth regardless of your focus or profession. To find relevant material, just google "design patterns" and, optionally, specify your language of interest.
For depth purposes, I recommend the following:
Algorithms: the "Algorithms in C" (*sigh* or Java) series and the "Art of Computer Programming"
Compilers: the "Dragon Book", "Optimizing Compilers for Modern Architectures", and "Programming Language Pragmatics"
Operating systems: "Operating Systems Concepts", "MicroC OS II: The Real Time Kernel", "Understanding the Linux Kernel", "Linux Device Drivers (free pdf!)", and "Mac OS X Internals: A Systems Approach"
Encryption: "Applied Cryptograpy"
C++: Read and understand several STL implementations (J/K...these are great references, but just use them as such).
C, C++, Assembly, Java, Systems Programming, and more: Purchase IDA Pro and start disassembling EVERYTHING. I'm semi-serious. Disassembly and debugging will give you an intimate, and possibly carnal knowledge of your processor, your operating system, and your compiler. The IDA Pro Book will help you get started.
Everything else: Stack Overflow and Wikipedia.
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answered May 8 at 6:49 nopnjmp
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