No.10684
>Ayumi is a world-class shogi (Japanese chess) player who can’t be beaten—that is, until she loses to a powerful computer called the Shooting Star. Ayumi vows to find out everything she can about her new nemesis. Lucky for her, Yuu Kano, the genius programmer behind the Shooting Star, is willing to teach her all about the inner workings of the microprocessor—the “brain” inside all computers, phones, and gadgets.
No.10686
Thanks for the recommendation. I've been wanting to get more in-depth knowledge on databases, having only surface level abilities to interact with one in the simplest form.
https://arxius.io/nojs?type=file&id=d12be045Left to right.
I just finished reading the whole thing at a slow pace.
There seems to be a lot more to databases than what little I knew.
Overall it took me a couple hours to get through the book with some distractions on the way. I didn't understand everything and will definitely need to review some of it again by using it in practice, and repetition to really remember all the minute details about technical terms.
It is indeed nice.
No.10687
>>10686Yes, most textbooks go into relational databases which are optimized ways to store lots of partially related data. Relational databases are very deep things with lots of systems you can manipulate. You could almost think of it as being as complicated as your Operating System.
But there are a lot of other things which count as databases such as storing a bunch of text files in a directory.
No.10691
>>10661My favorite manga guide, possibly the only guide with a plot as wacky as this one.
A technologically backwards fruit kingdom and a super cute and funny database fairy fighting against a playboy prince romantic rival. I also like how the prince comes up with exploits because he's the bad guy.