Episode 06 - Karl Stolley

Tim has a chat with Karl Stolley about his journey to becoming a Pragmatic author. * Recorded 19-May-2021 On the latest episode of the Pragmatic Hero’s Journey podcast, Tim chats with Karl Stolley, associate professor of information technology and management at Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago. --- Karl Stolley has been teaching, researching, and writing about web development up and down the stack since graduate school. He frequently speaks at national and international academic conferences, and he’s a presenter and active participant in many professional developer groups and meetups in the Chicago area.   With the contract signed and the project officially launched, Karl is working on his debut book with the Pragmatic Bookshelf, tentatively titled WebRTC: Build Real-Time Web Applications in the Browser. Beyond the professional advancement and other things this book means to Karl, writing and publishing with Pragmatic is a straight-up bucket-list item for him.   On this episode, Karl talks about his journey to becoming a pragmatic author and why selecting the right title for your book can make all the difference. Listen to the rest of Karl's story on this episode of the Pragmatic Hero's Journey podcast. You can stream the episode here: https://pragprog.libsyn.com/ or subscribe to the RSS feed using the following link: https://pragprog.libsyn.com/rss.

Om Podcasten

Welcome to the Pragmatic Hero's Journey, a monthly podcast about becoming a Pragmatic author. On this podcast, you'll hear from an eclectic group of authors as they discuss their personal journey to becoming a Pragmatic author. You'll discover what tools they use to write and produce code, what challenges and rewards come along with being an author, and what advice they can share to help you jumpstart your technical writing career. The Pragmatic Hero's Journey podcast is owned and operated by The Pragmatic Programmers, LLC, home of The Pragmatic Bookshelf. The Pragmatic Programmers, founded by Andy Hunt and Dave Thomas, has one simple goal: to improve the lives of professional developers.