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Studieboeken (4)
Value Proposition Design
How to Create Products and Services Customers Want
2014 || Paperback || A Osterwalder || John Wiley and Sons Ltd
The authors of the international bestseller "Business Model Generation" explain how to create value propositions customers can't resist "Value Proposition Design" helps you tackle a core challenge of every business -- creating compelling products and services customers want to buy. This practical book, paired with its online companion, will teach you the processes and tools you need to succeed. Using the same stunning visual format as the authors' global bestseller, Business Model Generation,...
Don't Make Me Think, Revisited / 3rd edition
A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability
2014 || Paperback || Steve Krug || Pearson || ook als eBook
Since it was first published in 2000, hundreds of thousands of Web designers and developers have relied on usability guru Steve Krug's guide to understand the principles of intuitive navigation and information design. Witty, commonsensical, and eminently practical, it's one of the best loved and most recommended books on the subject. It's a core foundational book that every Web designer must internalise to make their designs truly effective.
In this substantially revised edition, Steve return...
Effective Modern C++
42 Specific Ways to Improve Your Use of C++11 and C++14
2014 || Paperback || Scott Meyers || O'Reilly
Coming to grips with C++11 and C++14 is more than a matter of familiarizing yourself with the features they introduce. The challenge is learning to use those features effectively - so that your software is correct, efficient, maintainable, and portable. That's where this practical book comes in.
It describes how to write truly great software using C++11 and C++14 - i.e. using modern C++. Topics include: The pros and cons of braced initialization, noexcept specifications, perfect forwarding, a...
The Proteus Paradox
How Online Games and Virtual Worlds Change Us-And How They Don't
2014 || Hardcover || Nick Yee || Yale University Press
A surprising assessment of the ways that virtual worlds are entangled with human psychology Proteus, the mythical sea god who could alter his appearance at will, embodies one of the promises of online games: the ability to reinvent oneself. Yet inhabitants of virtual worlds rarely achieve this liberty, game researcher Nick Yee contends. Though online games evoke freedom and escapism, Yee shows that virtual spaces perpetuate social norms and stereotypes from the offline world, transform play i...