=== Formal studies === * Undergraduate courses of Mathematics and Educational Technologies at the HarvardExtensionSchool (2009). * Attended one term of Software Engineering course at Unviersita' degli Studi di Firenze in 1994. Computer Science exam **30/30 cum laude**. In 1995 I dropped out of the university to accept a job as an EmployedWorker for a small company, and a few months later for SeacCompany. * Undergraduate diploma in **Mathematics and Computer Science** with a rating of **56 out of 60**. Obtained in 1993 at the Istituto Tecnico Commerciale "A.Volta", Firenze. This course included a good amount of **Electronic Engineering**. === Non-formal studies and self-teaching === Over the years I tried to compensate for lack of proper university-grade education by making the local libraries much richer: * **Compilers**, reading several textbooks such as CompilersPrinciplesTechniquesAndTools, and many others. * **Algorithms** -- many, including classics such as DonaldKnuth's bible TheArtOfComputerProgramming, CambridgeUniversityPress's NumericalRecipes and NicholasWirth's ancient, but still brillant, "Algorithms + Data Structures = Programs". * **Operating Systems** -- Too many to mention here, most of which quite theoretical and boring. Of course, my favorite will always be AdvancedProgrammingInTheUnixEnvironment. * **Networking** -- Several books, including TcpIpIllustrated, several RFCs and technical papers. * **Programming Languages** -- All the obvious textbooks such as BjarneStroustrup's SeePlusPlusProgrammingLanguage, and many others like the old SeeProgrammingLanguage, ThinkingInJava, and dozens of C++ books. * **Programming Techniques** -- Countless. Such as SeePlusPlusTemplateMetaprogramming and the controversial ModernSeePlusPlusDesign by AndreiAlexandrescu. My absolute favourite is BrianKernighan's and RobPike's ThePracticeOfProgramming. * **Software Architecture and Design** -- All the "must-read" classics such as GangOfFour's DesignPatterns, UmlDistilled and UmlDesignPatterns. * **Project Management** -- My favourite certainly is TheMythicalManMonth, but I've read a few others such as ExecutionPlainAndSimple. * **Technical Writing** -- TheElementsOfStyle and DonaldKnuth's TheTexBook are my favourites on the topics of stylish writing and typesetting. * **Numerical Methods** -- I'm sorry to have quite a thin mathematical background. Nevertheless, I enjoyed reading DonaldKnuth's ConcreteMathematics and CambridgeUniversityPress' NumericalRecipes. * **Database** -- Relational algebra, principles of schema normalization, SQL.