Well, the only reason why I chose this book is that this book is the shortest in all books, simply for the sake of convenience. But I have to say that concentration is the essence is true, although it is very short, but it is very lean.
The whole book is actually 6 stories, each story shows a topic, the first chapter of the name of the question is what, the second chapter is what this question. The short two little stories are thought-provoking.
The most special part of the book is some philosophical, the key statement of its close-up and black amplification to show people, such as:
The problem is the difference between what you expect and what you experience.
Don't jump to conclusions, but don't overlook your first impressions.
You can never be sure that you have a right definition, but never give up the effort to seek it.
These cautionary words, coupled with the stories, can make readers more impressed. Although the book is software books, but the specific content is not closely related to software, but the problem of software is clearly pointed out, such as how to correctly find the existence of the problem rather than blindly looking for solutions to the problem. For software, the problem is very important, the cognitive problem is often more important than the problem, if not correctly identify the user's existing problems, then even the perfect solution is just and the user's needs out of the track.
Is your light still on? Reading notes 1