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by quohort
669 days ago
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Why do programming books always have some random unrelated illustration on the front? Usually when you have a textbook, they will have some nice illustration that is tangentially related to the content of the book (like fibonacci spiral for a math book or some chemical reaction for a chemistry book for example). But I suppose that there isn't really such an equivalent unless it's a computer graphics book. I guess it's also like how every project has to have its own "cutesey" mascot. |
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https://www.oreilly.com/content/a-short-history-of-the-oreil...
TL;DR:
> Some of the people at O’Reilly were taken aback: they thought the animals were weird, ugly, and a bit scary. But Tim [O'Reilly] got it immediately—he liked the quirkiness of the animals, thought it would help to make the books stand out from other publishers’ offerings—and it just felt right.
They even have a browser which helps you identify the animal:
https://www.oreilly.com/animals.csp