Cable Books
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Used price: $7.66

Worth the moneyReview Date: 2007-02-25
Not a technical manualReview Date: 2007-02-03
Would recommend this bookReview Date: 2006-08-15
about computer annoyances. Many of the tips and solutions
can save you frustrations that are always there even in
a minor way because you may not know how to fix them.
PC AnnoyancesReview Date: 2006-02-28
I'm reading it the second time with a felt tip marker. After reading a chapter I go to my computer, explore, and make changes. I've learned more reading this book than any other computer book I've purchased. And it's written so the average computer user like me can understand.
Very Practical,Funny,To the Point.Review Date: 2006-07-17


A good book to start teaching geographyReview Date: 2008-08-09
Fabulous book!Review Date: 2008-01-10
Great beginning map placement for kidsReview Date: 2007-12-16
Me on the MapReview Date: 2007-03-14
Explains Tricky ConceptsReview Date: 2007-01-06

Used price: $49.48

Excellent reference bookReview Date: 2008-05-10
The book covers the physical layer aspects of modern cable networks, in comparatively greater details than the MAC and transport layers.
The author has done an excellent job in choosing relevant details of each technology presented in the book and laying them out in an easy-to-understand manner.
Overall, it is a good reference book to have within one's reach and is a better starting point in one's understanding of cable networks, instead of searching for terms or concepts using internet search engines.
A thorough review of the Cable TV Network ArchitectureReview Date: 2007-12-20
Good Cable Modem Technology TutorialReview Date: 2005-02-02
An excellent book on CATV networkReview Date: 2006-01-10
Broadband Cable TV Access Networks by Shlomo OvadiaReview Date: 2003-07-23
I had purchased the book and enjoyed reading it. Indeed, it is a great system engineering book covering
a broad spectrum of technical subjects which I have a lot of interest. It broadened my knowledge on the arena of CATV which
was new to me.
(I came from Israel from the Satellite Communications field).
It is a recommended book to any communications
engineer, component engineer and system engineer dealing with fiber optics data communications and video transport.
It
covers all design aspects in all perspectives, system wise and component wise.
It provides a broad review, showing the
affects of RF chains and , optical links imperfections on a QAM signal in most scientific analytic and professional way.
The book is structured as a zoom-in, taking the reader from a broad picture of definitions, system architectures and topologies such as HFC, PON, zooming into each building block requirements and constrains such as optics CWDM WDM optical none linearity, pre-distortions, CATV receivers topologies , specs and optimized solution. Additionally it covers the aspects of protocols such as DOCSIS and CATV standards showing how to approach to system design, understanding its requirements in order to reach the proper design.
The books provides block diagrams, schemes plots and conclusion to each chapter subject.
Indeed Dr.
Shlomo Ovadia did here a huge effort and a great job.
This book is must have in any technical library.
Avi Brillant
Senior
Design Engineer
Luninent-Inc
20550 Nordhoff Street
Chatsworth
CA-91311
Cell 818-266-7330


Tracing the bar trajectory during the Clean & Jerk and the SnatchReview Date: 2007-11-25
You're Never Too OldReview Date: 2007-04-10
Thorough Weight Training BookReview Date: 2007-06-05
What I didn't like: 1st edition binding unraveling, small print, overwhelming size of information, sometimes dry writing style
Who should buy this? those looking beyond the basics and wanting something more integrative & descriptive approach - whole body lifting
Detailed review by former physiology teaching fellow and biochemist...Review Date: 2007-08-18
The first thing I would like to say is that I own and have bought many books on strength training and most of them are not even in the same category as this book. Of the books that are out there, most of them say the same thing in different ways, make unsubstantiated claims or set unrealistic expectations. In short, this book is a welcome exception. It is well-organized, detailed, thorough, well-written and dense with valuable material.
A lot of the focus here is on training for powerlifting. However, it's also a great strength training text with lots of references. The scope of the book is ambitious and covers the proper way to perform important exercises, information about periodization, explanations of how different types of programs affect the body, the importance of coordination, etc.
In addition, this title has many useful diagrams, training ideas and references to actual studies. The information in it is very credible and much more than one person's opinion. I was also extremely impressed with the detailed descriptions of how each exercise works, the anatomy involved and the sections on physiology.
One might assume that a book like this would read like a text book in accounting or calculus (not that there is anything wrong with either of these subjects).... However, it sometimes difficult to be technically precise and at the same time engaging to the reader. On this account, Dr. El-Hewie has certainly succeeded.
Although this book is quite expensive, it covers a TREMENDOUS amount of ground in a reasonable space. It was clearly a labor of love and it is well worth every cent. Rather than wasting money on more of the same, I recommend getting a few good books. This is one I would NOT like to be without.
Another book that I saw recently for hard-gainers had a lot of good content in terms of building mass. I think it fell down a bit in the nutrition/supplement area, but it is much less expensive than this and covers a subset of this material that is most important to training properly for mass. This book is called From Scrawny to Brawny. There are a FEW other books I saw that I thought were quite good and I will be reviewing them in the near future. I will most likely be reviewing the ones I thought were quite bad as well.
Lastly, this book covers lots of nuances like nervous system adaptation, relationships between strength, mass and power. The importance of coordination and how to plan a path forward depending upon your goals. It's really one stop shopping for an athletic approach to strength training vs. bodybuilding. Bodybuilders will find a lot of great material here, but this is NOT the emphasis of this particular book.
One of the best books to have as a reference even for a woman of any age (even 75 years old.)Review Date: 2007-02-14
As is stated, the emphasis of El Howie's book is on weight-lifting and power-lifting (which focuses more on strength) as compared with Bodybuilding (to get those shapely muscles that make our stomach flat and the rest of us curvaceous.) Women in general want to look great in a bikini and the Bodybuilding orientation is the way to go.
But he gives enough coverage to Body-building and nevertheless, he is meticulous about form.
The other two books I have liked in conjunction with this is Delavier's Strength Anatomy and his Women's Strength Training Anatomy (I recommend getting both whether you are male or female.) Those books give you very clear basics for form, lots of detailed diagrams and so forth. El Howie's book is extremely comprehensive.
There are various debates as to how often to work out, whether you should focus on just parts of the body each day at a time or workout the whole body in each session. There are also differences of opinion as to best plan your meals, whether and when you should do cardio in conjunction with the weight-lifting. It would be useful, if you are a first-timer, to go for Body for Life or some other program that involves lifting weights. At bottom, in my experience, how one comes out on the various debates invariable is what works best for them, whether physiologically, psychologically or schedule wise.
I just want to say to any woman reading this, if you don't already know, you will never get back or achieve that girlish figure if you don't lift weights and lift heavy weights. And you can no matter what you age.
Though I do not want to provide a link on an Amazon post, if you google John Stone 42 the first link that comes up should be "Fit Women over 42- 89 on parade." If you go to that link you will find tons of stories with pictures of women going through fantastic transformations starting at age 50, 60 and older. Don't ever believe you are "too old" or "too out of shape" to achieve this.
And El-Howie's book is a great reference for getting form down correctly to get the best results and not injure yourself.

Excellent gets betterReview Date: 2008-08-12
Great strides are being made and this book gives inspiration and hope that our doctors will continue to attack cancer in all forms.
I recommend this reference book to all who want an authoritative source to understand the types and stages of most common cancers.
Everyone's Guide to Cancer Therapy; Revised 5th Edition: How Cancer Is Diagnosed, Treated, and Managed Day to Day (Everyone's Guide to Cancer Therapy)
Cancer TherapyReview Date: 2008-03-18
This book taught me to teach my patientsReview Date: 2006-05-11
Best Cancer Resource BookReview Date: 2002-06-13
It is written in an easy style, such that an average person can understand the language. It presents many questions for the patient & family to ask doctors, along with the many options available.
I highly recommend this for anyone who needs any type of information about cancer and it's treatments.
Recommended by oncology nurses!Review Date: 1999-10-07

Used price: $9.97
Collectible price: $400.00

A Step by Step Guide on How to SellReview Date: 2005-12-17
High School StudentReview Date: 2005-08-22
Dr. Michael J. DiLauro, Ed.D.Review Date: 2005-09-16
THERE IS NO BOX is a must read for minds that strive for ongoing personal growth.Optimism and mental toughness are overriding themes in the book which translates into long-term self improvement.
A quick readReview Date: 2004-05-03
I've used this reference and found it excellent!Review Date: 2004-05-15

Collectible price: $14.95

a great read!Review Date: 2008-04-05
Highly Impressed in NCReview Date: 2008-04-03
I am pleased to have been able to meet this author recently. She is every bit as honest and passionate in person as she is her book. A true Southern Bell with a great talent. If you have not bought this book yet, you really ought to give it a try. I can't wait for the next book to come out!
Southern Fried Women by Pamela King CableReview Date: 2008-04-03
A Southern Fried Ride!Review Date: 2008-04-03
Also, the use of simile and metaphor is filled with imagery and life; painting with words what most people can only hold in their imaginations. "Cry" is so full of painful reality and "Coal Dust on my Feet" broke my heart. "Beach Babies" is probably my favorite - Bertie is a tragic character, but one that has so much to teach us.
Thank you, Pamela, for sharing your gift with the public. Sometimes as I read your words, I heard my own voice. We share many of the same beliefs, attitudes, joys, and heartaches in our observations of the world. Reading your book was like sitting down and spending an afternoon with you in conversation. Thank you.
Debra Thomas
A Different View of Southern GirlsReview Date: 2008-04-08

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An action-packed suspense yard set in Music City, U.S.A.Review Date: 2008-07-06
While on vacation, Rutledge "Ledge" Trabue, owner of the Awfria, a pleasure craft home-ported in New Orleans, spots a "bobber" in the Cumberland River. Someone has murdered Karen Blaine, a Vanderbilt graduate student.
When Nashville police too quickly rule the drowning a suicide, Trabue asks Florida-based criminologist Albert Bryan to help investigate the suspicious circumstances of the case. One of the most enjoyable features of the novel is the "disrespectful" (read: playful) banter between these two close friends.
Staecker's dialogue often takes on a self-consciously slack-jawed tone and the third-person narration, an omniscient "God's-eye" view, tediously reveals not only what the characters are doing, but also what they are thinking and feeling. He annoyingly resorts to Tom Swiftly-like comments, such as "'So what's up?' Amelia asks quizzically." Such gratuitous explications insult the reader's intelligence.
Nevertheless, the muted mermaid's tale has its appeal. It's an action-packed yarn about the good guys vs. the bad guys--and an chilling vision of how a malevolent force has no respect for human life.
About the author: Del Staecker was greatly influenced by the events and people of his childhood and youth. He lived in a town near Chicago, and hobos camped in the family's yard. Often, he visited his Uncle Earling in Old Town (Chicago's beat scene) where Beat Generation writer Jack Kerouac, poet Allen Gisberg, singer/'song writer Bob Dylan, and a host of artists and wannabes bung out with him at one time or another. 'The experience of having Uncle Earling's influence as a counterweight to Boy Scouts, Little League and his relatives' farms was surreal as Staecker learned to milk cows, bale hay, and catch a curveball one day and then listen to beat poets the next. Like the hobos from his youth, Steacker ran way from a thirty-year career to sit in a cabin in Idaho with no phone, no TV, and no radio for up to twenty hours a day and write The Muted Mermaid by hand. Virtually penniless, he used scrap paper from his day job \of running a white water An
Excellent plot keeps you guessing about original charactersReview Date: 2008-06-25
Bring on the Sequel!Review Date: 2008-06-17
The Muted MermaidReview Date: 2008-05-20
Great Read!!!Review Date: 2008-07-09

Used price: $18.08

Good readReview Date: 2007-07-24
Yes, you really *do* want your workforce to be strange...Review Date: 2007-07-14
Contents:
Preface; Be Strange. Be Very Strange.; Shine a Flashlight into the Black Box That Exists Between Your Workforce and Beating Your Competition; Organizational Outcomes - How Do I Know I Am Winning in the Way I Want to Win?; Performance Drivers - What Must Customers Notice About Us So That We Win?; Strange Workforce Deliverables - What Our Workforce Does to Make Customers Notice and Love Us; Job Specific Strangeness - Different Deliverables from Different Jobs; Strange Workforce Architecture - What Systems Will Produce the Deliverables I Need From My Workforce?; Strange Workforce Architecture - Breaking Out From the Pack; Strange Workforce Architecture - Taking the Next Step; The Magic of Metrics - Creating and Implementing Measurement Systems;Conclusion; Index
The "strange" that Cable talks about here is a workforce that obsesses about one or two key items that make a difference to the customer. For example, Whole Foods has a workforce that is obsessive about their product and presentation. These people can tell you just about anything you want to know about what they sell, because they believe in it completely. Their hiring systems are geared around making sure that new people coming into the system share that same obsessiveness, and the group is rewarded based on how well each person does. If you're not pulling your weight or if you're not obsessed like everyone else, you'll wash out. It doesn't mean you're not a hard worker or aren't cut out for working in food retail. It just means that you're not "strange" in the way you need to be to work at Whole Foods. This differentiator often is considered crazy or uncopyable by the competition. But since the customer loves it, Whole Foods has a niche all to themselves. And their people truly *are* a competitive advantage for them.
The other issue that makes this difficult is the measuring and metrics. Getting information from your customers about the few things you want to be strange about is hard work. The numbers often aren't easily obtainable without putting some effort into it. Which is another reason competitors don't want to follow that direction, and why changing your workforce to a strange workforce isn't easy. But if you want your company to stand out and be different/strange, it's a requirement to be able to track those factors and measure your people against them. Otherwise you may end up with good solid people, but just not ones that are strange in the areas in which you want to be viewed as unique.
This book also struck me as something you can do for yourself and your skills. Perhaps you want to be known as someone with an obsessive attention to deadlines, design, or quality. You could use this same technique to find your own strange quality/qualities, figure out how to measure it, and them shape yourself into a competitive advantage over others...
While I don't expect an overwhelming majority of companies to run right out and change their HR departments to match this model, reading Change To Strange will at least open up that small window of doubt about whether you really are hiring people who are a competitive advantage for you and your company.
If you treat your employees the same as everyone else treats theirs how can your company be unique?Review Date: 2007-06-23
Daniel M. Cable tells us that only a strange workforce, that is one that doesn't do things like everyone else, one that knows and has confidence in its uniqueness and specialness and in its goals and methods, can create something that is special, unique, valuable, and with a sustainable (ongoing - but adapting) advantage in the marketplace. Cable explains how and why your workforce can become something valuable and a driving force behind your success.
He starts off the book showing us how we too often treat our employees and the whole HR process as a kind of black box that just happens. We assume that if we are following the laws and standardized HR processes and avoiding being sued we are doing a good job. When we turn things around and start to view this whole concept the way the author frames it we can see that this kind of idea is indeed absurd. It is like building a process to build standardized widgets that claim no special qualities in the marketplace and then later wondering why, despite our fine leadership, those widgets fail to gain special attention in the market place or market dominance.
What I like about this book is the way Cable plays with our perceptions along the way. This is not your standard business book. He asks us questions that seem odd at first, and then we realize that is the point. Have you ever looked at the back of your hand and for some reason your perception changes and it looks a different size to you and in some ways quite different than it ever had before? That is what this book will help you achieve with your workforce. The author admits that building a "strange" workforce takes a great deal of effort and probably will take some time to achieve, but if you want to be regarded as special by your customers you have to be special. And to be strange (not normal - not typical - not ordinary) you have to have strange people working for you who have a strange sense of mission. This requires you to hire strangely, train strangely, measure performance strangely, and provide strange products and services (that is, surprisingly good and surprisingly desired products and services).
Cable provides a simple framework for this complex process and shows us how achieving this strangeness will get us noticed in the marketplace, allow us to satisfy our customers, and avoid the stagnation that often comes with initial success. The old tragic story of sticking with what works until it kills you has to go.
One of the great complaints among employees today is that they don't matter to management. Employees see through the rhetoric and that is why most companies are not only boring to work for, they are boring in the marketplace. Here is a way to turn that around and energize your company by unleashing the real power in your workforce. Of course, once you head down this path, not all your employees will go with you and there will be some significant turnover. Even good "ordinary" employees have to go. Because they provide inertia against becoming successfully strange.
So, get strange.
Being different and "strange" is often a requirement for success, read about it hereReview Date: 2007-08-18
Several examples of companies that have adopted such methods and are very successful are presented. One of the best is an explanation of the career of major league baseball general manager Billy Beane. Beane's position is that the standard criteria used to evaluate baseball talent are simplistic and incorrect. Since he rose to the position of general manager of the Oakland Athletics, Beane has fielded a team that ranks at the bottom in terms of salary and near the top in terms of wins. Much of his emphasis is on the "quality at-bat" where a player forces the pitcher to make extra pitches and is willing to accept a base-on-balls, even when there are runners on base.
Since this is a skill undervalued by all other teams, this has allowed Beane to acquire players for much less than other teams are willing to pay them. By molding the team in that image, he has developed a very successful team, although the Athletics have had a difficult time winning games in the playoffs. Given the current financial inequities that exist in major league baseball, this is truly a major success story that others should pay attention to.
Another example is the policy of Home Depot to hire contractors to work in the appropriate sections of the store. Therefore, when the do-it-yourself customer comes in, the person helping them is very knowledgeable and can provide the highest level of customer service. This service translates into an enormous competitive advantage over other stores and can increase sales several orders of magnitude over the extra salary expenses.
To his additional credit, Cable also is clear in stating that hiring "strange" employees is not for everyone. It requires courage to be willing to adopt a novel business or a non-traditional approach to an old one. In nearly all cases, the initial expenses are higher than in other areas and exterior observers are generally very skeptical of the new and novel ways of doing business.
I once participated in a faculty development seminar entitled, "A Whack on the Side of the Head." The purpose was to try to get us to think of new and novel ways to present our material. This book reminded me of that seminar, demonstrating that while going down a different path can be extremely challenging, it can also be very rewarding. From personal experience, those rewards are more than monetary; there is a form of satisfaction in being successfully different that is like no other. Perhaps the key to your success can be found in this book.
Strange Name, Odd Construct, Excellent ContentReview Date: 2007-11-14
1. Organizational Outcomes - three year out lagging indicators of strategic success.
2. Performance Drivers - what customers need to notice for the strategy to win.
3. Strange Workforce Deliverables - ways your people must be `strange' to make the performance drivers happen.
4. Strange Workforce Architecture - design and construct of your people management systems cause your workforce to be `strange'.
An obvious fanatic on measurement as the way to speak strategy with an organization, Dr. Cable noticeably understands the difficulties, time and hard work involved (as well as the many nuances) with creating and maintaining an organization's connection with its strategy. In fact, he is so concerned about the need for an understanding of the specifics, that he holds his favorite chapter, "The Magic of Metrics", for the final chapter of the book. In the meantime he covers "Job-Specific Strangeness" where he distinguishes the strategic leverage of jobs (not leadership positions); sorting them into executor (direct deliverers of 'strange'), operator (essential players in creating value), and outsourcer (cannot be linked to `strange' performance drivers) positions. In subsequent chapters he explains his "Strange Workforce Architecture", supplementing the specifics with numerous examples of 'strangeness' in action.
From uncovering the 'strange' performance drivers of a 'strange' strategy, to hiring and managing the `strange' people who fit with a 'strange' strategy's delivery, the professor conveys a compelling and instructive narrative. This book is recommended for anyone who has used or considered the balanced scorecard; it will put you on a 'strange' and better path.
Dennis DeWilde, author of
"The Performance Connection"

Used price: $16.80

Fishermen's SweatersReview Date: 2008-03-02
Cables, Diamonds, and HerringboneReview Date: 2008-06-16
GREAT!Review Date: 2008-05-28
Beautiful gansey sweaters, highly recommendedReview Date: 2007-10-29
good basic introduction to gansey knittingReview Date: 2007-12-07
Related Subjects: Court TV Nickelodeon BBC MTV Tech TV Discovery Channel Radio TV Food Network Disney Channel
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