



Watlow 945A-1DD0-A000 | Series 945 Temperature Controller Repair Service
Marsoni
M251S
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Friday, May 29
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4.5 ★★★★★
Based on 192 reviews
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Product Reviews
★★★★★ 2
Glad I bought this used
Format: Paperback
It’s packed with buzzwords and adjectives, offering plenty of in-vacuum advice and self-promotional ‘hire-me’ vibes. There’s some real insight here, but it’s buried under a lot of noise.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2026
★★★★★ 1
Not useful
Format: Paperback
This book has a few pieces of good advice, but its buried under mountains of weird and amateur level musings. Example: Paul Singman advocates for eliminating ETL entirely. How? Just reprogram the applications to which you may or may not have the source code to handle your data processing. He calls Intention Data Transfer 🥴 Thanks for the advice Paul, I'll get right on that.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2026
★★★★★ 5
Good starting point. But can't find the code.
Format: Kindle
Reading chapter 3. It was so far so good, but can't find the code in the repo. "All the related code can be found in the repository under project/hooks-notification." And in the repo I see no project folder. Please help!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2026
★★★★★ 4
Good overview of the leading Agentic Framework. Will become outdated quickly.
Format: Paperback
3.5 Stars rounded up.
Not a bad place to start if you need to get up to speed fast with Claude Code, understand its vast feature set, how it works under the hood, best practices, and the various agent primitives and how to get the most out of them. Agentic frameworks (Claude Code in particular) are quickly becoming table stakes for anyone working in tech, so it's best to start now.
I appreciated the author's ability to flesh out areas where Anthropic's documentation is lacking in depth and nuance, and for some not already working with Claude in their own repos, the fact that he provides "toy" repos where one can experiment with the tools without fear of consequence.
Where the book falls short is that most of the stuff in here is already covered pretty well already in Anthropic's docs, or even better so in their free "Skilljar" courses. What's more, some areas are given a bit of a shallow treatment, while others are a bit better done. So it's a bit inconsistent in that sense. Also, I can see how this book will quickly lose its currency in a few months at the pace things are going.
Ultimately, for me, the price of this book was a bit rich for my liking given the criticisms above. Still, I feel like I got valuable info that rounded up what I already knew from working with this agentic framework.
Recommended.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2026
★★★★★ 5
Practical AI Engineering Beyond Prompts — One of the Better Books on Agentic Coding
Format: Paperback
This book is not another “AI coding hype” book.
A lot of books talk about agents at a very high level. This one actually explains how things work when you try to use them inside real development workflows. That was the biggest difference for me.
What I liked most was the focus on context engineering, memory, MCP, hooks, subagents, and workflow orchestration instead of just “prompt better.” The author spends time explaining why long-running agent systems fail, how context grows over time, and why most AI coding setups become messy without structure.
The examples also feel practical — The HookHub project, Next.js setup, GitHub workflows, Claude memory files, and MCP integrations make it easier to connect theory with actual implementation.
From my retail domain experience perspective, I could immediately connect this to forecasting and pricing workflows.
For example:
* agents helping analysts generate specs before model development
* automated code review for promo forecasting pipelines
* isolated subagents for pricing, promotions, assortment
* persistent memory for business rules across teams
* MCP integrations to pull context from internal systems safely
The section around context isolation and subagents especially stood out because that is very similar to how enterprise forecasting teams already operate in reality. Different teams own different decision spaces.
One thing I appreciated: the author does not oversell AI.
There is a strong focus on constraints, context pollution, hallucinations, performance degradation, and workflow reliability. That makes the book feel grounded instead of marketing-heavy.
This is not for complete beginners though.
If someone has never worked with Git, APIs, coding agents, or LLM workflows, parts of the book may feel overwhelming early on. The author clearly says this is not beginner-level content.
Overall, probably one of the more practical books I have read recently on agentic coding systems.
Good for:
* software engineers
* AI engineers
* enterprise architecture teams
* technical product teams
* analytics leaders trying to operationalize AI development workflows
Especially useful if your organization is trying to move from “AI demos” into actual production workflows.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2026