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Proudly Serving My Corporate Masters:

What I Learned In Ten Years As a Microsoft Programmer
Front Cover
3 Reviews
Writers Club Press, 2000 - Computers - 342 pages
Why has Microsoft really been successful? Forget what you have read elsewhere. In Proudly Serving My Corporate Masters, a ten-year veteran of the front lines of the software development wars gives the real story on why the company has succeeded, what it does well and what it does badly, and what it needs to do in the future. The book has first-hand information on how Microsoft works internally: the relationships between programming teams and the rest of the company; how Microsoft recruits and interviews people; the sacrifices that are made to get software done; the lure of stock options; and what it is like to be sued by your own government. The insights are relevant for anyone interested in Microsoft, the software industry, or business in general.

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Review: Proudly Serving My Corporate Masters: What I Learned in Ten Years as a Microsoft Programmer

User Review  - Mark - Goodreads

I really really liked Find the Bug by the same author. Unfortunately I was really really disappointed by this book. First, the author never seemed to have an idea of what audience he was writing for ... Read full review

Review: Proudly Serving My Corporate Masters: What I Learned in Ten Years as a Microsoft Programmer

User Review  - Mark - Goodreads

Not a great book, but provides an interesting peek into the software processes at Microsoft. Read full review

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About the author (2000)

Adam T. Barr is the Pastor of Teaching Ministries at Corinth Reformed Church and President of Borderlands, a ministry that equips church and campus ministries to disciple Next Generation leaders. He has earned degrees from Hope College, Western Theological Seminary, and Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and studied at Westminster Theological Seminary. He updated, edited and contributed to the Zondervan Illustrated Commentary: One-Volume Illustrated Edition ed. F. F. Bruce.

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