Books in 2015 - Part 2
Monday, January 4, 2016 at 9:36AM
Roy Rubenstein in Deutsche Telekom, Laurent Vivienne, Lorenzo Pavesi, Lukas Chrostowski, Michael Hochberg, Robert W. Lucky, Yuriy Babenko, books, silicon photonics

More book recommendations - Part 2 

Yuriy Babenko, senior network architect, Deutsche Telekom

The books I particularly enjoyed in 2015 dealt with creativity, strategy, and social and organisational development.

People working in IT are often right-brained people; we try to make our decisions rationally, verifying hypotheses and build scenarios and strategies. An alternative that challenges this status quo and looks at issues from a different perspective is Thinkertoys by Michael Michalko.

Thinkertoys develops creativity using helpful tools and techniques that show problems in a different light that can help a person stumble unexpectedly on a better solution.

Some of the methods are well known such as mind-mapping and "what if" techniques but there is a bunch of intriguing new approaches. One of my favourites this year, dubbed Clever Trevor, is that specialisation limits our options, whereas many breakthrough ideas come from non-experts in a particular field. It is thus essential to talk to people outside your field and bounce ideas with them. It leads to the surprising realisation that many problems are common across fields.

The book offers a range of practical exercises, so grab them and apply.

I found From Third World to First: The Singapore Story - 1965-2000 by by Lee Kuan Yew, the founder of modern Singapore, inspiring.

Over 700 pages, Mr. Lee describes the country’s journey to ‘create a First World oasis in a Third World region". He never tired to learn, benchmark and optimise. The book offers perspectives on how to stay confident no matter what happens, focus and execute the set strategy; the importance of reputation and established ties, and fact-based reasoning and argumentation.

Lessons can be drawn here for either organisational development or business development in general. You need to know your strengths, focus on them, not rush and become world class in them. To me, there is a direct link to a resource-based approach, or strategic capability analysis here.

The massive Strategy: A History by Lawrence Freeman promises to be the reference book on strategy, strategic history and strategic thinking.

Starting with the origins of strategy including sources such as The Bible, the Greeks and Sun Tzu, the author covers systematically, and with a distinct English touch, the development of strategic thinking. There are no mathematics or decision matrices here, but one is offered comprehensive coverage of relevant authors, thinkers and methods in a historical context.

Thus, for instance, Chapter 30 (yes, there are a lot of chapters) offers an account of the main thinkers of strategic management of the 20th century including Peter Drucker, Kenneth Andrews, Igor Ansoff and Henry Mintzberg.

The book offers a reference for any strategy-related questions, in both personal or business life, with at least 100 pages of annotated, detailed footnotes. I will keep this book alive on my table for months to come. 

The last book to highlight is Continuous Delivery by Jez Humble and David Farley.

The book is a complete resource for software delivery in a continuous fashion. Describing the whole lifecycle from initial development, prototyping, testing and finally releasing and operations, the book is a helpful reference in understanding how companies as diverse as Facebook, Google, Netflix, Tesla or Etsy develop and deliver software.

With roots in the Toyota Production System, continuous delivery emphasises empowerment of small teams, the creation of feedback processes, continuous practise, the highest level of automation and repeatability.

Perhaps the most important recommendation is that for a product to be successful, ‘the team succeeds or fails’. Given the levels of ever-rising complexity and specialisation, the recommendation should be taken seriously. 

 

Roy Rubenstein, Gazettabyte

I asked an academic friend to suggest a textbook that he recommends to his students on a subject of interest. Students don’t really read textbooks anymore, he said, they get most of their information from the Internet. 

How can this be? Textbooks are the go-to resource to uncover a new topic. But then I was at university before the age of the Internet. His comment also made me wonder if I could do better finding information online.

Two textbooks I got in 2015 concerned silicon photonics. The first, entitled Handbook of Silicon Photonics provides a comprehensive survey of the subject from noted academics involved in this emerging technology. At 800-pages-plus, the volume packs a huge amount of detail. My one complaint with such compilation books is that they tend to promote the work and viewpoints of the contributors. That said, the editors Laurent Vivien and Lorenzo Pavesi have done a good job and while the chapters are specialist, effort is made to retain the reader.

The second silicon photonics book I’d recommend, especially from someone interested in circuit design, is Silicon Photonics Design: From Devices to Systems by Lukas Chrostowski and Michael Hochberg. The book looks at the design and modelling of the key silicon photonics building blocks and assumes the reader is familiar with Matlab and EDA tools. More emphasis is given to the building blocks than systems but the book is important for two reasons: it is neither a textbook nor a compendium of the latest research, and is written for engineers to get them designing. [1]

I also got round to reading a reflective essay by Robert W. Lucky included in a special 100th anniversary edition of the Proceedings of the IEEE magazine, published in 2012. Lucky started his career as an electrical engineer at Bell Labs in 1961. In his piece he talks about the idea of exponential progress and cites Moore’s law. “When I look back on my frame of reference in 1962, I realise that I had no concept of the inevitability of constant change,” he says.

1962 was fertile with potential. Can we say the same about technology today? Lucky doesn’t think so but accepts that maybe such fertility is only evident in retrospect: “We took the low-hanging fruit. I have no idea what is growing further up the tree.”    

A common theme of some of the books I read in the last year is storytelling. 

I read journalist Barry Newman’s book News to Me: Finding and Writing Colorful Feature Stories that gives advice on writing. Newman has been writing colour pieces for the Wall Street Journal for over four decades: “I’m a machine operator. I bang keys to make words.”  

I also recommend Storytelling with Data: A Data Visualization Guide for Business Professionals by Cole Nussbaumer Knaflic about how best to present one’s data. 

I discovered Abigail Thomas’s memoirs A Three Dog Life: A Memoir and What Comes Next and How to Like It. She writes beautifully and a chapter of hers may only be a paragraph. Storytelling need not be long.

Three other books I hugely enjoyed were Atul Gawande's Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End, Roger Cohen’s The Girl from Human Street: A Jewish Family Odyssey and the late Oliver Sacks’ autobiography On the Move: A Life. Sacks was a compulsive writer and made sure he was never far away from a notebook and pen, even when going swimming. A great habit to embrace. 

Lastly, if I had to choose one book - a profound work and a book of our age - it is One of Us: The Story of Anders Breivik and the Massacre in Norway by Asne Seierstad

For Books in 2015 - Part 1click here

Further Information

[1] There is an online course that includes silicon photonics design, fabrication and data analysis and which uses the book. For details, click here 

Article originally appeared on Gazettabyte (https://www.gazettabyte.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.