Книгата удари 700 страници - доцента вика, ако удари 900 да я делим на 2 и да издадем 2 книги. 😄
Ама толкоз теми има за писане (едва 10 глави съм написал едва, а я планирам вече за 22).
То всека тема си е отделна книга - Container Security in Azure, Azure Infrastructure Security, DevSecOps, SOC Analysis, Secure Software Architectures, AI and Cybersecurity.
Като издадеме книгите - ще си ги пиша в CV-то.
Колко гъзари Dev-ове има дет освен, че познават технологиите са и доценти по темата. А такъв може да стана за около година.
Изкушавам се да си дам още малко зор неколко години и да стана професор. Верно професор в БГето не е равно на професор в "бела държава" (а трябва - "професор" универсално е равно на "лаладжия").
А и най-вече искам да стана "професор" щото ще стана над 1.85 м. висок. Ся като имам фирма вече съм 1.80 м., ама друго си е и да съм "професор". 😊
I wonder whether my professor friend—who is physically somewhat
short—would be so eager to hide his title if he knew that, besides
making strangers more accommodating, it also makes them see him as
taller.
Studies investigating the way in which authority status affects
perceptions of size have found that prestigious titles lead to height
distortions.
In one experiment conducted on five classes of Australian college students, a man was introduced as a visitor from Cambridge University in England.
However, his status at Cambridge was represented differently in each of the classes. To one class, he was presented as a student;
to a second class, a demonstrator; to another, a lecturer;
to yet another, a senior lecturer;
to a fifth, a professor.
After he left the room, each class was asked to estimate his height.
It was found that with each increase in status, the same man grew in perceived height by
an average of a half inch, so that as the “professor” he was seen as two and a half inches taller than as the “student.”