hn_user82179 2 days ago

Interesting, this might be perfect for me depending on how the book is written/who the target audience is. $60 for an ebook or $80 for the hard copy is extremely hard to swallow though. I absolutely think a book of that purported length means an author probably put a lot of effort and time into it, and should get compensated. But I'm not familiar with the author at all so you're really buying sight unseen. Has he written anything else? I couldn't find anything with a quick google search.

Tangentially related, I was hoping to skim at least the first chapter via the Safari Books Online subscription which afaik had all of the No-Starch books on there (including early access I thought?). But no luck, maybe it'll be added there closer to publication date.

  • justin66 2 days ago

    Regarding the cost, just a quick note, when you buy the hard copy directly from No Starch Press you get perpetual access to the ebook as well. That's maybe cooler than it sounds: at any given time you've got access to the newest (or close to it) printing of the book via ebook, and it's nice to get the little updates and errata that accumulate over the years in a big book like for example, The Linux Programming Interface.

    (at least that's the way they used to do business - I'm pretty sure they still do)

  • kaycey2022 2 days ago

    I found a pdf of his Unix lecture notes on the "high seas". These were pretty good. I'm looking forward to his book and I will buy it.

  • d3Xt3r 2 days ago

    I concur. At least a sample/preview of a couple of chapters would be nice. Bit of a hard sell to dump $60+ on a completely unknown piece of work.

  • LMMojo 2 days ago

    I found only this: "A Time-independent Definition of Software Reliability"

    https://a.co/d/0q7gkTo

    • hn_user82179 2 days ago

      oh good find! I went from that title to the Internet Archive version (pdf alert: https://dn790007.ca.archive.org/0/items/timeindependentd00we...) (legal because as stated in that Amazon description, the paper is in the public domain).

      I am both convinced the author is quite smart and hope that the topic/audience of the book is very different from the paper because I would not survive 1000 pages of that.

  • Cebul1234 2 days ago

    Now it's $80 and $100. We should buy it quick, because the price is rising fast.

cyberax 2 days ago

> Chapter 15: Interactive Programming > Chapter 16: The NCurses Library

That seems... kinda obsolete?

IMO, newer editions should focus on newer APIs like io_uring, cgroups, namespaces.

  • PeterWhittaker 2 days ago

    There are applications where ncurses is still a great approach for a controlled, structured UI, e.g., certain security appliances with complex configurations where web UIs, e.g., are not, by default, permissible.

    (I spend a lot of time in ncurses on our appliances. We are looking at a web interface, but it will have to be homegrown and SELinux aware. It's a ways out yet....)

  • DrFalkyn a day ago

    Doesn’t top use ncurses?

    And other utils like k9s

  • synergy20 2 days ago

    totally agree, there are a few nice books so really no need to repeat,but one covers new APIs from the last decade will be wonderful

  • signa11 2 days ago

    it’s more like off topic given that ncurses/curses are ui-toolkits (hah !) than anything else.

shmerl 2 days ago

Does it cover some modern Linux features like io_uring?

__turbobrew__ 2 days ago

I might buy it, but the content already seems to overlap with APUE and/or the Linux Programming Interface

  • romerstomer 2 days ago

    I've read both and still refer to TLPI as the bible. But if ever a subject needed an ELIF version, it is this one

    • __turbobrew__ 2 days ago

      I could see there being space for a book which covers new(er) kernel mechanisms and features, but as you said TLPI is the Word and if your book covers the same content it doesn’t add a lot of value.

    • kaycey2022 2 days ago

      TLPI is ELIF version though

  • alfiedotwtf 2 days ago

    APUE is a National Treasure, but I think LPI has long surpassed it as what you should keep within from your desk chair. LPI is a goldmine and the gift that keeps on giving, but this book looks like a nice easing into it. Instabuy!

dmart 2 days ago

Would be interested in any impressions of this vs. TLPI. Seems like it covers a lot of similar topics.

synergy20 2 days ago

looked at the toc,so similar to tlpi the bible book, and did not have chapters to cover what's new,e.g. cgroups,io_uring,namespaces,ebpf,etc. honestly i lost my interest immediately

sovietswag a day ago

Holy crap this was my operating systems professor!!! I was not expecting to see this here... big smile on my face. He was a great teacher :).

zabzonk 2 days ago

>EARLY ACCESS Ebook, $79.99

Oh, come on now! Or all these NoStarch books ludicrously over-priced?

  • rerdavies 2 days ago

    Serious price for a serious book, presumably. It's not at all uncommon to pay this sort of price (and sometimes more) for high-quality software development books. Most of the books in my software development library are in this price range (if not significantly more).

  • Jtsummers 2 days ago

    Only $59.99 with the coupon on the same page. Less than 6 cents a page.

  • justin66 2 days ago

    In the universe of books that will be used among other things as college textbooks, this book is at the low end of the scale, not the high end.

  • prettyblocks 2 days ago

    It's over 1,000 pages.

    • jagged-chisel 2 days ago

      How much of that is fluff?

      • alfiedotwtf 2 days ago

        No Starch Press books tends to be all meat no bone. I don’t think I’ve picked up a NSP book and regretted it… unlike other publishers who just phone it in

  • patmorgan23 a day ago

    It's a professional reference book. Get your workplace to buy it.

  • johnisgood 2 days ago

    Wait till it is on libgen, then.

coolThingsFirst 2 days ago

just get linus to teach you, it will end up cheaper than this book