Even though it is maxed out at 16 gigabytes of RAM, the other specs make it nice for a home lab server: ESXi Support for 2014 Apple Mac Mini 7,1 | virtuallyGhetto.
–jeroen
Posted by jpluimers on 2014/12/01
Even though it is maxed out at 16 gigabytes of RAM, the other specs make it nice for a home lab server: ESXi Support for 2014 Apple Mac Mini 7,1 | virtuallyGhetto.
–jeroen
Posted in Apple, ESXi5.5, Mac, MacMini, Power User, VMware, VMware ESXi | Leave a Comment »
Posted by jpluimers on 2014/12/01
After speaking on EKON 2014 and ItDevCon 2014, the last month has been extremely busy on both the work and family side of things.
So it took longer to write my review of the Delphi Cookbook by Daniele Teti, Packt publishing (ISBN 978-1783559586).
Before the review, first two ways to see for yourself if you’d like the book:
Daniele Teti has a Table of Contents on the page where he introduced his book, but that ToC is a bit poorly formatted, so I included a better formatted one below.
Some other reviews of the Delphi Cookbook also make an interesting read (I read them after writing my own):
Before the review a disclaimer. I bought the eBook version before Packt publishing asked for reviewers. They sent me a paper copy for free (which somehow took 2 weeks to arrive). I read about 25% of the book before the two European Delphi conferences, and the rest over the last two weeks.

I’ll try to keep this to the point, as too much detail would be killing. And I’m not writing a book here (:
So lets start with what I like:
I want to stress the last: Daniele Teti did an excellent job on this.
When writing a book or teaching material, it is hard to strike balances between the kinds and diversity of topics, the depth and order of the topics, and choosing between what to cover and how to cover it.
The way the chapters a built together with a variety of interesting topics per chapter, a great mix of chapters, and the various topics building (but not too much relying) on previously covered topics is really great. The whole book shows that Daniele is a great teacher. Well done.
Then a few things I dislike:
The dislikes are minor compared to the likes, so here is the…
I didn’t buy the book by accident: knowing the presentation and teaching style of Daniele, I was expecting a nice mix of topics explained in a light and fun way. The book surpassed those expectations by far.
So any Delphi programmer should buy this book. If not for using right now, then for getting some ideas, and reading the various topics later.
Below some suggested combinations for using this book various Delphi audiences.
Buy this book. It gets you inspired, even if only some of the topics are suited for real beginners. Then get the books below, read them and get back to the Delphi Cookbook for more inspiration:
Buy this book. Consider buying Coding in Delphi by Nick Hodges.
Also read Coding in Delphi by Nick Hodges.
I know few people that master all Delphi topics well (I’m not one of them: especially on the mobile side I’ve still a lot to learn). Even for gurus, I think this is a nice book, especially considering the price.
–jeroen
Synchronizing shared resources with TMonitor
Talking with the main thread using a thread-safe queue
Synchronizing multiple threads using TEvent
Displaying a measure on a 2D graph like an oscilloscope
–eof–
Posted in Delphi, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Delphi XE6, Delphi XE7, Development, Software Development | 5 Comments »
Posted by jpluimers on 2014/12/01
Every vendor should publish version numbers like this to make it easier for their customers to check if they are current or not.
I can’t promise to have a complete list, or the latest versions, but I will update with the versions I have used.
–jeroen
Posted in Conference Topics, Conferences, Delphi, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Development, Event, Software Development | 8 Comments »