After earning an MS in Computer Science from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Michael Kilian went to work for the DEC Eastern Research Laboratory working on incremental compilation techniques for the Trellis object-oriented programming language. This effort produced one of the first compilation systems that treated code as objects, allowing small fragments to be modified and integrated into a complete program. On the strength of this work, Michael was accepted into the DEC Graduate Engineering Education Program, and earned a Ph.D. with his thesis Parallel Sets: An Object-Oriented Methodology for Massively Parallel Programming. Such was the beginning of nearly five decades in Software Engineering. His projects ranged from parallel object-oriented databases (using techniques from his thesis) to a distributed computation engine designed to robustly perform millions of complex transactions per second spread over commodity server platforms.Throughout this career, several key technologies recurred: hash tables, finite state machines, and message-passing protocols to perform computations across multiple servers. While interviewing new graduates for engineering positions, it became apparent that some of these basic building blocks of complex systems were not being taught. Just as English Majors must be familiar with fundamental works in the English Language, Michael believed that certain software ideas were fundamental and should be understood regardless of whether a particular project required themA laundry list of these topics was compiled and circulated to a number of colleagues and the ten patterns presented in this book is the result of those discussions. The list is not comprehensive. It also contains ideas that could be eliminated in a truly minimal list, but which have such elegance that a programmer should be exposed to them. The goal is to make a student familiar -- if not comfortable -- with programming models that have proved useful time and again.Michael now consults for companies that need help in assessing software architectures to improve their own products, enter new businesses, or to qualify potential acquisitions. When not busy with his consulting, he enjoys woodworking, kayaking, and biking and continues to program.