I had this awesome book full of BASIC games for the Commodore 64. It ruled.
Mastering Amiga Assembler
Teach Yourself C in 24 Hours (all of the Teach Yourself * in 24 Hours books are embarrassing, though not as embarrassing as "For Dummies" books).
Ooh...No, I've got it: I took the TCP/IP portion of the MCSE exams, and I had a study guide for that. That's the most embarrassing (because it indicates I took an MCSE exam...but, there were dark times in IT before most of you were born...many servers ran this OS named Windows NT, instead of UNIX or Linux).
I had a similar reaction. I think a lot of people did. One should never underestimate the power of (a) making it easy for people to get a hello world running, and (b) view->source.
I had that same experience with HTML, I'm sure if I could've viewed source on a load of decent Python programs I would've gone nuts for it as a kid. A hell of an improvement to feeding a book full of BASIC into a C64. If the rest goes to plan, there'll be a lot of handy hackers around in a few years.
1978 Guerin's, Vaschalde's and Warusfel's "Le calculateur programmable de poche" (in French, translated: "The Programmable Pocket Calculator"). A translated excerpt: "... we can imagine that [in the future] programmable calculators will be branched through the telephone network to central computers that hold massive amounts of data. "
Anything with "Certification" and "Microsoft" in the title. It was a present. I swear. IT WAS A GIFT, OKAY? I have elderly relatives. [sigh] On the other hand, that really shouldn't count as a technical book.
VB.NET for Dummies. Maybe it was VB for Dummies...i can't remember, it was 4 years ago, and I threw it away, along with my Java, C++ and Technical Math book (I regretted throwing the math book away).
I had this awesome book full of BASIC games for the Commodore 64. It ruled.
Mastering Amiga Assembler
Teach Yourself C in 24 Hours (all of the Teach Yourself * in 24 Hours books are embarrassing, though not as embarrassing as "For Dummies" books).
Ooh...No, I've got it: I took the TCP/IP portion of the MCSE exams, and I had a study guide for that. That's the most embarrassing (because it indicates I took an MCSE exam...but, there were dark times in IT before most of you were born...many servers ran this OS named Windows NT, instead of UNIX or Linux).