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Stop trying to be tougher. Build systems that fail smaller.
Most people treat burnout, overwhelm, bad decisions, broken routines, and team chaos as personal failures. Fail Small argues something sharper: many of these problems are design failures. The system has no backpressure. No circuit breaker. No graceful degradation. No clean boundary. No recoverable past.
Software engineers have spent decades designing systems that keep working under overload, uncertainty, bad inputs, broken dependencies, conflicting users, and constant change. They gave names to the moves that make fragile things resilient: copy-on-write, idempotency, backpressure, bulkheads, snapshots, feature flags, anti-corruption layers, and more.
But these were never just software ideas.
A family needs backpressure. A career needs graceful degradation. A company needs circuit breakers. A friendship needs boundaries. A creative life needs snapshots. A mind needs garbage collection.
In clear, plain language, Abhay Singh translates thirty engineering patterns into practical tools for work, life, teams, money, habits, and change. This is not a coding book. It is a book about learning to see the hidden structure underneath recurring problems - and redesigning that structure before one bad day becomes a total collapse.
You will learn how to:
Fail Small is the first book in The Hidden Operating System series: a field guide to the patterns complex systems use to survive, adapt, and recover.
Ahoj! Jsem Libroamiko, tvůj knižní rádce.
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