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Want to accelerate software development at your company? See how we can help.
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An autistic Ukrainian boy lived by routine. Then the Russians upended his world - The Economist   

When he was three Artem was diagnosed with severe autism. He grew up in a ninth-floor apartment in the seaside city of Mariupol in south-eastern Ukraine. His father, Anatoly, now 54, who worked as a theatre director, was big and jolly and fond of a glass of vodka. Artem’s mother, Anna, also 54 and petite with a pixie haircut, had given up her job as a seamstress in the theatre’s costume department to take care of him. She also looked after her mother, who lived with them and was so old that she could remember the second world war. She liked to tell the story of how she found a tank in their courtyard and a German soldier who cleaned his gun using her mother’s best shawl.

Artem could not speak and did not go to school like other children. His parents tried to build a bridge to his world. When he was a teenager, they managed to teach him a few syllables. “Ya-ha” for ya khochu, which means “I want”; “pi”, for pyit, “drink”; “pa” for pamagi, “help”, which Artem used when he had difficulty tying his shoelaces or dressing himself.

Artem loved to walk, often for hours at a time. But when the family had to queue at a bus stop or wait in a shop, he became agitated: he found the gap between doing things frustrating and incomprehensible. His parents would say, “Padazhdi, padazhdi”, which means “wait” and Artem learned to repeat this self-soothing mantra. “Zhdi, zhdi, zhdi”.

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5 New Books You Should Read That You Won't Find in Business School - Inc.com   

Feel like you've hit a wall in your career? Whether you want to fast-track the growth of your business, get a promotion, expand your professional network, or break into a new industry entirely, there's no goal that's impossible to reach with the right help. Read these five books from a world-renowned brain coach, billion-dollar founder, former Panera CEO, puzzle master, and Nobel Prize-winning astronaut to break any barrier and make yourself unstoppable at work.

Jim Kwik, world-renowned brain coach to movie stars, athletes, tech mavens, and CEOs, updates his New York Times bestseller to bring you the Limitless Expanded Edition (out November 14). Kwik provides the practical skills to capitalize on your natural strengths, boost productivity and focus, automate tasks to free up mental bandwidth, and use A.I. to enhance H.I. (human intelligence). By leveling up your cognitive game, every action you take in and out of the office will bring you closer to limitless success.

Liz Elting is an entrepreneur, philanthropist, and one of Forbes' Richest Self-Made Women. In Dream Big and Win, she reveals why innovation is not synonymous with invention, and divulges inspiring tips you can implement immediately to not only dream big but win in the workplace. Doing will always eclipse dreaming, and Elting's frank and humorous recollections of lessons in entrepreneurship serve as a guide for anyone who seeks to fulfill their highest potential.

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