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The Camunda Holiday Reading List 2020

Who doesn’t love a good book? The cold, dark and grey weather — at least in the Northern Hemisphere — is the perfect excuse to throw an extra log on the fire and sit down with a good book, and perhaps a glass of Glühwein.  With the holidays ahead, we asked our colleagues across Camunda to share their reading recommendations — from books to sharpen your skills, improve your code and inspire your leadership, to reads that will make you stop and think about personal development. We hope you enjoy these books as much as we have: Books to hone your Engineering Knowledge  Chris Zell, Software Developer Learning Chaos Engineering: Discovering and Overcoming System Weaknesses through Experimentation Chaos Engineering: System…

By Charley Mann

Who doesn’t love a good book? The cold, dark and grey weather — at least in the Northern Hemisphere — is the perfect excuse to throw an extra log on the fire and sit down with a good book, and perhaps a glass of Glühwein.

With the holidays ahead, we asked our colleagues across Camunda to share their reading recommendations — from books to sharpen your skills, improve your code and inspire your leadership, to reads that will make you stop and think about personal development.

We hope you enjoy these books as much as we have:

Books to hone your Engineering Knowledge

Books to Boost your Career

Books to Nurture Personal Development

Books to Inspire your Leadership

Books by Camundi

If you’re interested in what our Camundi are writing, as well as reading, make sure you check out:

And don’t miss these titles, coming in 2021:

Practical Process Automation by Bernd Ruecker:

Cloud-Native Continuous Delivery by Mauricio Salatino:

Teams are wasting time reinventing common and well-established (in Open Source communities) practices and technical solutions that don’t directly benefit their companies. This book aims to provide examples of these practices applied using Open Source projects, such as KNative, Cloud Events, Jenkins X, Helm, Zeebe, Spring Cloud, etc. The readers of the book should be able to finish each chapter understanding how each tool can directly benefit them, what the alternatives are, and how to get started with a working example.

Chris Zell
Nele Uhlemann
Jakob Freund

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