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Networks Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Networks
XML Family of Specifications: A Practical Guide (2 Volume Set)
Published in Paperback by Addison-Wesley Professional (2002-06-10)
Author: Kenneth B. Sall
List price: $54.99
New price: $36.22
Used price: $4.93

Average review score:

How to get a Perfect Bound copy of this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-19
Attention Michael Pachis and others who purchased this book in 2006: I am the book's author and when I saw your comments, I contacted my publisher. If you purchased a copy recently and received it in 3-hole punch format, send me an email and I'll put you in touch with the publisher. They have a small number of perfect bound copies they can send you instead. Use the email address on the right side on my personal web site (kensall.com) home page. I hope this helps.
(I gave this 5 stars simply to not impact the book's current rating.)

Thorough in its explanations, lots of additional references
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-07
This is an excellent book to understand, develop and code XML. However, in the parsing discussions (chp 7-10) an understanding of OOP and Java programming are almost required. Other than that, it is an excellent text.

Note: This is not a paperback!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-26
I want to warn customers that the publisher has gone to a "print on demand" publishing model and this book is not delivered as a paperback, but as eleven hundred three hole punched loose leaf pages! This leaves you with the task of finding a binder after paying 40$ for the book! Since it is book size (8 x 10) it awkawardly fits into a standard 8.5 x 11 binder, not very convenient for reading or transporting, and you need the binder to be 3.5" thick to fit the book in the binder.

I gave it five stars for content, but this new method of publishing gets zero stars.

great book. Must have for CS students.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-22
This book is not an "how to" guide, nor does it claim to be one. I mean by this that if you are, say a Java programmer looking for a book that concretely shows you how to integrate xml with Java then you would be better off with one of the so many Java/XML books on the market.

However, if in your work or your studies you feel that you need to gain a more thorough understanding of the W3C specifications related to XML, then this is the book to buy.

All the W3C specs are available for free on the web. The trouble is, W3C documents are designed to provide a precise definition of a standards, they are not designed to be especially intelligible by mere mortals (however technologically enclined). Some are quite readable, others far less.

Firstly, I really like that this book present all the relevant specifications and working drafts in perspective. Secondly, I found that it does a remarkably good job at translating these specifications (without simplifying them) in understandable terms.

In my work, I am interested in gaining as thorough as possible a view of XMl technologies and this book helps me greatly. I also like the fact that it present a well-organized bibliography at the end of each chapter (sadly many computer books from Wrox, O'reilly, Que an like don't have a bibiography as if to say "everything inside this book comes straight from the author's mind. DO not look any further).

I have reviewed for myself around twenty XML books. I found this book to be one of my top favorite. I recommend it especially for:
- CS students or programmer with a theoretical bent.
- anybody who wants to get a thorough overview of W3C standards.

Rather practical!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-04
Where to start? With the concise history of where XML came from and why each design decision was made and how the evolution of specifications took place over the years, or the thorough explanation of all the XML specifications, or the programming and parsing aspects of XML and metadata, or the cool XML timeline poster towards the end of the book? This book has much to offer any person interested in finding out what XML is and why and how it has changed our world.

Kenneth B. Sall, the author of this book, organized this book in a fashion where each section could be studied on its own, and if there are references to the previous sections, they are appropriately mentioned. This way, one does not need to sit down and cover this 1000+ page book cover to cover to realize that the topic of conversation is. The stage is set at the beginning by the author commenting on the fact that XML can describe everything under the sun, even the kitchen sink:

"XML: ... maybe it's everything but the kitchen sink? Say, have you heard the one about the XML Kitchen Sink Language? ..."

I have been working with XML for sometime now, and I am still amazed at how it has grown and expanded in to our everyday lives in the past few years. One can spend months coming up to speed with the specifications and the XML "realm", and that's not enough. This book does not even cover, in a great detail at least, the Web services realm. That alone is a couple of thousand page book. The background topics are essential to any reader: basic XML syntax, DTD, Canonical XML, Namespaces and XML Schema. Once you have these topics covered and well understood, you can jump around to any other part of the book, displaying XML data for example or XML programming API's.

One can spend a couple of hours trying to figure out how these specifications fit in, but the author hs already done the job with a very useful picture inside the cover page. What's your forte? Cascading Style Sheets to convert XML data into a PDF document for example, or an XHTML document to display on a web site? XHTML is also covered in length, if you do not know that is and what it offers over the plain old HTML.
My favorite topics were probably the authors explanation of the XML parsing and the available API's and resources. SAX, DOM, JAXP and JDOM are covered in great detail.
* SAX - the API that started it all. Minimal and light-weight. Fast and event driven.
* DOM - Memory intensive, complex, but very powerful. It's a tree based model, and the tree represents the whole document.
* JDOM - java specific. Can be used with either DOM or SAX.
* JAXP - java specific again, but easier to use than JDOM.
There are also a number of C++ XML parsers that the author touches on such as the Apache Xerces, C++ SAX and many others, but the main topics revolve around the four most popular parsers mentioned. These sections are mostly tutorials and how-to's. Each parser is used in an example and example is analyzed piece by piece. DOM is covered in more detail due to the number of levels (DOM level 1-3) that it has. Since DOM is more powerful and more complicated, the topic is a bit more advanced and would require more attention from a novice. If you read thru the SAX chapter and understand it well, DOM would not be that much of hurtle, but make sure that you read understand SAX first. Java centric API's including XML-RPC, JAXB, JDOM, JAXM are covered by the author to depict how XML can be used and how it would benefit the application - and developers in-turn. The icing on the cake is when K. B. Sall outlines the differences between SAX, DOM, JDOM and JSAX. He talks about each of the technologies in detail, tell you what the advantage and disadvantage of each one is, and then it compares them against each other. By the time you are done reading these sections, you would become an expert in XML parsing and programming.

XLink and XPointer. How can one leave without these two core technologies and tools? They are truly remarkable; easy to use, light weight and easy to learn. Well, they are well covered - as you would expect from this book. One thing about these topics is that they could be very abstract and need examples, and we got lots of those. The example depict the efficacy of how one can use XLink to create complex connections between sets of resources, even though you do not have a write access to those resources. This is very handy and resourceful technique is you need to build an e-commerce site. With XPointer, one can locate individual XML elements, set of elements or even a range of XML data between two points. The ability to specify "range" of elements is where the true power of XPointer is revealed.

The references, the related resources for each topic, simple to complicated examples and a CD filled with goodies, source code used throughout the book and the W3C specifications at your fingertips outline the some of the other benefits of Kenneth B. Sall's "XML Family of Specifications" book.

Networks
The Best of Online Shopping: The Prices' Guide to Fast and Easy Shopping on the Web
Published in Paperback by Ballantine Books (1999-10)
Authors: Lisa Price and Jonathan Price
List price: $16.00
New price: $2.49
Used price: $0.44

Average review score:

Eric Leebow
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-25
Thank you for an excellent guide for online shopping! If you are looking for great Internet guides for Kids & Family, High School, and College students, please check out the You Are Here Internet series!

this is an online shopping bible
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-16
Online stores come and go, especially the big ones, but this book lists hundreds of terrific small online stores that carry really unique stuff. I especially liked all of the stores that sell natural cosmetics and natural fiber clothing for me and my kids. I've had this book 2 weeks and already its saved me lots of time.

Better than the shopping portals
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-20
I was tired of seeing the same old online stores over and over again. This book pointed me to some real winners. It's a big time saver. Very easy to find what I wanted quickly.

Terrific
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-18
I learned a lot about online shopping that I never knew before. But the best thing about this book is all the online stores, listed by categories. I found some neat stores. Loved the party section.

Before reading this book, I was wary of online shopping
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-11
Before picking up this excellent book, I was wary of online shopping -- and I still am, but now I'm intelligently wary. The authors do a marvelous job of helping understand what you can trust and what you can't, how online shopping works in all its various manifestations, and what strategies to use when you do shop online. The book showed me that online shopping is not (as I had thought) just for shopping addicts who need a fix 24 hours a day, but a great space for intelligent and discerning consumers. I'm still not a big spender online (or anywhere), but I've used the book to help me find some things I couldn't find anywhere else and at surprising prices. I think this book is going to go down in the so-far brief history of online commerce as a milestone achievement. It has certainly changed my views about WWW commerce and made me a better consumer. I can't say enough about this expansive, easy-to-use, fun, and informative work. I hope they plan to update this work regularly.

Networks
Building Your Business with Google For Dummies
Published in Paperback by For Dummies (2004-06-25)
Author: Brad Hill
List price: $24.99
New price: $13.36
Used price: $13.37

Average review score:

Gotta Be Google
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-21
At the moment the only real game worth playing is Google. No, I'm not a spokesperson for them but it is clear that if you're going to play you ought to play with the guys that own the ball. There is power in "Building Your Business with Google for Dummies". The best thing is that when you meet the Google criteria and succeed with them you can use the exact same business building blocks with any other resource. Brad Hill understands this and does a great job relaying his knowledge via the "Dummies" format. I'm beginning my second read-through. Thanks Brad.

Larry J. Frieders, RPh
[...]
340 Marshall, Unit 100 ~ Aurora, IL 60506
Tel 630-859-0333

I learned so much from this book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-30
This book took my business, AUDIN Web Design, to new heights. Now anyone can just type in AUDIN Web Design in Google (or Yahoo and MSN, for that matter) and find me. This book allowed me to master Google, the juggernaut of search engines. If you cannot tame that tiger, you will not survive in the market place. My company, AUDIN Web Design, has helped many small business get ranked on Google. This is my bible. I carry it around wherever I go. I advise everyone to read this book before consulting a professional about your online search needs. You could get ripped off if you are not wise about your choice of Company. This book has given me such confidence with the Google juggernaut, that my company now offers a 100% money back guarantee policy. A lot of companies can't offer that because they don't know what they are doing. Read this book and get informed. It could save you lots of money, yes money, the stuff you work so hard for. The stuff makes the world go round.

A must read for any business owner.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-09
Since Google is currently master of the universe you need to understand what Google is looking for when it ranks web pages. This book not only does that but goes into detail of other Google services like froogle, adsense and adwords. I highly recommend this book to anybody trying to build a presence on the web.

Solid Overview of AdSense, AdWords, Froogle and Catalogs
Helpful Votes: 37 out of 37 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-18
"Building Your Business with Google For Dummies" by Brad Hill is one of many options for learning Google's tools. This one is focused on using it to promote business websites.

You might not need this book. To find out, go to Google's website, and create an account. Look at the FAQs, testimonials and the help areas. Much of what's in Hill's book is logical, but is organized in as sensibly as any I have seen. I need this book for that reason. It saved me time from having to learn this information in a too slow trial-and-error way.

You'll learn a few important things about Google, and how to help them help you attract traffic, sell products, or create interest in your website.

AdWords
I have an online e-commerce site, and need to know Google. As a smaller business, I can't compete with the major companies in being listed in categories I feel are important. That's where Google AdWords comes in. It allows me, for a fee per click, to compete.

Hill's explanation of strategies and process is solid. There are ways to lose money, and he helps show how to test keywords, use ad groups, edit ads, and how to bid intelligently. He also looks at the premium service that allows big businesses to use oogle with less worry about click-through rates.

AdSense
AdSense, the tool that places Google ads on websites based on the page's content. While I only make a few cents when a vistor clicks through an ad, it helps me provide a service to my customers who do not feel my site met their needs.

Hill explains how AdSense makes money, and warns against cheating.

Increasing Your Page Rank
No one knows Google's formula for ranking pages. The most important factor is having useful information, being linked on other like-minded sites, not abusing the process.

Hill tells you what page rank means, and how to avoid mistakes many webmasters make. This includes tips on design, domain choice, keyword use.

Using Froogle and Google Catalogs
These are two features I have never used. Hill gives a good overview of this Google tool, which provides exposure to those websites selling products in a catalog-style, or through AOL and Yahoo shops.

I fully recommend "Building Your Business with Google For Dummies" by Brad Hill.

Anthony Trendl
editor, HungarianBookstore.com

Easy to Understand, organized well
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-14
This book was very helpful in teaching novices how Google works with online businesses in order to make the businesses more profitable and also make Google move valuable. The techniques were easy to apply.

Ed
http://www.imonitsoftware.com

Networks
Business Darwinism: Evolve or Dissolve : Adaptive Strategies for the Information Age
Published in Kindle Edition by John Wiley & Sons (2002-02)
Author: Eric A. Marks
List price: $39.95
New price: $31.96

Average review score:

Family stick together
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-17
Not only has Eric always been successful in the world of business but his creativity and ingenuity put him at the top of his field. His insight is always helpful and our mother says that he is brilliant! Family ties aside, Eric's book is of great help for anyone trying to get ahead or even a toehold in the difficult climate of todays business world.

A Must-Read Corporate IT Primer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-20
I found "Business Darwinism" to be a no-nonsense, intelligently written evolution of information. The reading experience is educating, and at the same time, entertaining. It's a compendium of fascinating, and important events that shaped our current day information systems models. The Darwin, and other evolution analogies that the author selected, as well as the attention-grabbing timelines and events makes for an interesting read. He very nicely positions the IT importance intelligently at the center of the corporate model without overstated importance, and supports it with well-built logic as to why it works. The appeal of the book is that anyone, hanging on to any position on the corporate flagpole will find it both interesting and educational, as it helps him or her understand the core value of information at the business level, without all the technogibberish.

Putting Information Into The Right Perspective
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-20
I found "Business Darwinism" to be a no-nonsense, intelligently written evolution of information. The reading experience is educating, and at the same time, entertaining. It's a compendium of fascinating, and important events that shaped our current day information systems models. The Darwin, and other evolution analogies that the author selected, as well as the attention-grabbing timelines and events makes for an interesting read. He very nicely positions the IT importance intelligently at the center of the corporate model without overstated importance, and supports it with well-built logic as to why it works. The appeal of the book is that anyone, hanging onto any position on the corporate flagpole will find it both interesting and educational, as it helps him or her understand the core value of information at the business level, without all the technogibberish.

A wonderful complement to corporate strategic thinking....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-28
Eric Marks has offered us a rich framework of information-age paradigms to complement the secular world of strategic thinking.

A wonderful parallel is drawn between the organic nature of the corporation and the darwinian theory of survival. The author demonstrates that while thinking might be organic or hollistic, the IT organization lacks woefully behind due to its structure and the lack of generative planning that accompanies regular business chaos.

The book makes a conscious effort to stop at theory and frameworks, hopefully to be continued with a plan to action and tools for the implementation in subsequent publications.

Information Mastery is the key to Survival!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-22
IT is on the verge of becoming a commodity and an integral part of our every day life. Information is now on our finger tips. Unfortunately, most businesses still don't have good visibility to their operations. In this book, Eric makes the argumaent that all businesses, large or small, must make real-time information part of their daily decision making process. He calls this concept Information-Based Business Modeling or Information Mastery. He discusses at length how companies can leverage real-time intelligence internally as well as with their customers and partners. Marks supports his reasoning exceptionally well with many real life examples. Eric's concepts are based on many years of first hand experience in implementing IT solutions. Business executives will greatly benefit from the concepts presented in this book.

Networks
Careerxroads 2002 (Careerxroads, 7th ed)
Published in Paperback by JIST Works (2001-12)
Authors: Gerry Crispin and Mark Mehler
List price: $26.95
New price: $11.46
Used price: $0.34

Average review score:

Successful Recruiters Will Use This Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-29
The CareerXRoads series by Gerry Crispin and Mark Mehler should be a reference book that every recruiter buys. I am a recruiter with almost 22 years of experience and since 1998, I have purchased CareerXRoads. It is that good.

Candidates who want to use the Internet to find their next position will also find these books very helpful.

Gerry and Mark include informative articles for recruiters and job seekers alike at the beginning of the book.

Then they dive into the Internet and review websites that are job, resume, and career management sites. Their reviews are very helpful.

Recruiters, this book helps you determine where to spend your time and/or money to find niche sites to conduct searches. They also will suggest when a site may just be a waste of time.

Candidates, Gerry and Mark help you organize your job search. Their list of niche sites may help you zero in on companies who do what you want to do. Then, you may apply online or try to network your way into an interview.

Bottom line, if you are a recruiter or a candidate, purchase CareerXRoads.

Bill Humbert www.recruiterguy.com

What you need to know about today's and tomorrow's search...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-08
Recruiters, job search sites, corporate career sites, HR testing online -- these are standard elements of the 21st century world of work.
If you are experienced at clicking in and out of employment-related sites, you will appreciate the very professional presentations of 500 sites the authors consider the best. There are also references to 2000 other sites.
If you're overwhelmed by the topic, or fear you'll never catch up, this volume is a place to begin. After perusing the book, you will know more about professional uses of the internet in the areas of job search and employee recruitment.

CareerXRoads-The place to start your job search on the web.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-18
I am a career management consultant. The first two suggestions I give all new job seekers at any levels is to get a copy of CareerXRoads and get some business cards printed.

CareerXrRoads
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-11
I have found that CareerXRoads is the bible for a good job search, using the internet; Obviously it is a great help in finding Internet sites where the right jobs are posted. But better than that, it tells you where to post your resume and how to post it, using the right format, key words, etc.

As a Career Coach, I recommend this book to all of my clients.
And, even more critical, as a Recruiter, this book is where I go to find the hard to find candidates.

CareerXRaods is both on my desk and another copy is in my attache.

I am even thinking of giving my kids each a copy on their birthdays.

Richard Stone
Human Resources Consultant

Excellent resource -Job Seekers AND Recruiters
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-20
Every job seeker and recruiter should own this book!
This book is a tremendous resource to a job seeker. It offers advice on everything from networking to resume development. On the recruiter side, it offers advice on how to maximize your recruiting efforts in a variety of ways. The index and rating of internet sites is an invaluable tool to both [I should know - I used this book during a recent job search and now use it on a regular basis as I have found a new position as a Partnership Recruitment Manager!]
I have met one of the authors [Mark Mehler], and he has a true committment to helping individuals and companies use the internet to its full potential in job and candidate searches.
I highly recommend this book!

Networks
Carrier Grade Voice Over IP
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Companies (2000-09-22)
Author: Daniel Collins
List price: $59.95
New price: $51.83
Used price: $2.19

Average review score:

Top marks for clarity
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-06
Top Marks for this highly readable and clear intro to Voice over IP. The subject matter is dealt with in reasonable detail and the author achieves great clarity in explaining difficult technical concepts. He also delves a bit into the history and background which also helps to put the subject matter in context. He even adds a small example of how to go about dimensioning a VOIP network at the end of the book.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-09
Aimed specifically at designers of public telecommunications networks, this easy to read book provides practical and useful hands-on information. Where necessary, topics are covered in great detail. For example, 120 pages are dedicated to H.323. Softswitch architecture and programming are covered, and 55 pages are devoted to discussing Quality of Service issues.

We believe this book to be an essential read, and recommend it highly.

Very much self contained
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-10
Great book on VoIP, still emerging technology. It did a great job in explaining concepts related to QoS such as RSVP, DiffServ and MPLS. Right from basics such as IP, UDP, TCP and various coding techniques you will find great explanation to each and every item. If you are interested in knowing about VoIP or you if u wanna work on VoIP this is the ONLY book you need. There is very detailed and neat explanation related to MGCP, MEGACO, SS7 and SIP too. The only thing that i felt lacking is testing of voice quality both subjective and objective and how they could be done. No doubt in giving 5 *s to it, great job!

Excellent intro to VoIP
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-06
This book does a very good job of giving an introduction to the VoIP world. As a professional in the telecom domain, I found this book very useful. Application of VoIP to telco domain as in the case of softswitch architecture for backhaul and the QoS issues that carriers have to deal with is also well covered at a good amount of detail. The book also provides detailed discussion on the protocols. However, I skipped passed these sections and unable to comment if such material was covered well.

Overall - a very good book. Highly recommend it.

Useful reference
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-22
I serious think that I should not write this review since I do not understand half of this book, but then again, I have read this and also Cisco Intergrated Voice Data and can in some way be a poor/insufficient abeit enthusastic tour guide. I have noticed other reviewers describing this book as great - but I do not think this book is comparable to monumental classic like Jeff Doyle or Kennedy Clarks books on Routing and Switching - where they display in-depth knowledge on the topic plus an ability to explain thing in the clearest possible way. I rate this book 5 stars for the sole reason that the author do appear to have an overwhelming knowledge of computer telephony - although I cannot quite judge whether they are technically accurate or error free - and has taken his valueable time off to write them down and share with us. While the author definitely has the kindest intention of making it "understanable" to even the not-so-technically-advance group of reader - as is evidenced in the way he start off this book by explaining why bother with IP telephony, and why TCP/IP is inherently unsuitable for IP telephony - I suspect that when it come to harder topics like H.323, SIP etc - there is simply no way or no time to find a more reader friendly way to present it. In the end it is a tough read - so tough that I will have to put it aside for a while as you need to be in the highest state or mental agility and strength to make hard yakka through the book. Nevertheless, this book is a useful reference - and for topics that this author decide not to include - check out Cisco's Integrated Voice and Data.

Networks
Creating Web Pages Simplified (3-D Visual Series)
Published in Paperback by Hungry Minds Inc (1997-01-18)
Authors: Ruth Maran and Paul Whitehead
List price: $24.99
New price: $1.98
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $24.99

Average review score:

Very BASIC!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-03
A door opener, maybe, but also very basic. I needed something slightly more advanced than this picture book text. If you have no experience with web pages and limited experience with computers, this might be the book for you. For me, it was a waste of my money.

This book is a must for all novice HTML web page creators.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-31
Creating Web Pages Simplified, the best book of web page creation I ever read. This book will clearly show you how to create a basic web site, to a great state-of-the-art web page. Why buy another web page creation book when this one has it all? Graphics, incredible exaples etc. This book is a must. I recommend it.

Great for the inexperienced computer user.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-11
The full color photos and easy to follow instuctions make this a great book for the experienced and inexperienced computer user alike. I would recomend this book to any one who wants to learn how to build a web page or wants to learn more about building web pages.

Great as an overview
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-20
Some of those commenting here are teenagers; here's a comment from an almost-50 Mom. This book provides a great overview. I've been in computers for 25 years, but never had occasion to create my own web page. This book gives a good overview of the various parts of a web page and how the pieces fit together.

Those of you who are mainframers will laugh your heads off when you see that the internet has made Script cool...

A door-opener to the world of HTML...
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-14
This book is a door-opener for those who want to learn to use HTML. This book teaches you the basics, and gives you room to expand, and learn more by practice and trial-and-error. The best book for learning HTML!

Networks
The Culture of Collaboration
Published in Hardcover by Red Ape Publishing (2007-01-02)
Author: Evan Rosen
List price: $29.95
New price: $29.95
Used price: $22.95

Average review score:

A worthy book on how businesses can best tap diverse capabilities in many situations.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-06

This book was well written. And I think it was definitely worth the read. I think it went a little heavy on citing The Mayo Clinic and Toyota, and it totally ignored that collaboration usually doesn't have much room for job security. But all in all I liked it. The book included the following 11 chapters:

1. Climate shift: Embracing rich, real-time collaboration
2. The culture of collaboration
3. The collaborative environment
4. Lifestyles and workstyles
5. Breaking down barriers
6. Integrating collaborative tools into culture
7. The Tao of tools
8. The brave new world of law and compliance
9. Collaborative leadership
10. The global collaborative enterprise
11. The new script

I would have liked the book much better if its content had stuck to what the title suggested it would be about. If the book had merely described the culture necessary to allow collaboration to thrive, then I would be hard pressed to make much criticism. While it is true that collaboration can be wonderful since it "lets people with a variety of skills and talents come together spontaneously and create value" (Rosen, 22), it also is a problem for anyone who works in a company and is concerned for their job security. Probably the biggest problem with this book is that it does not address the job security issue.

Not too long ago I read and reviewed The Collaborative Enterprise (ISBN: 0300114648), another book that covers much of the same material as The Culture of Collaboration. In my humble opinion, the instant book is better written, but the other book is better researched and covers the subject more thoroughly. If the instant book interests you, then I recommend you read both books to better understand the subject matter.

The culture of collaboration (a "we" culture) butts heads today with the culture of hierarchy (a "me" culture) or command and control philosophy. Whereas collaboration shuns individualism and promotes the group or team concept, the command and control philosophy does the exact opposite. While it is true that collaboration will usually get things done quicker and probably better than mere command and control, it also is interested primarily in short term rather than long term stability. And most people who work for a living are interested in long term stability since they have a spouse to help support and children to feed often times.

Collaboration will thrive in partnerships, joint ventures, and special projects since these endeavors are about building things quickly and well. But the author tries to convince us in his book that all companies will benefit from collaboration and all companies should strive to create a culture for collaboration. I don't buy into this theory and the book does not cover all bases in trying to convince me to change my mind. 4 stars!

Collaboration: The Creative Endevour
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-17
Enter "collaboration" into Amazon's search, and the first thing you'll find is Evan Rosen's "The Culture of Collaboration"... and for good reasons too.

When traditional businesses try to tap onto the spectacle of the information ecology that's all the rage in the web industry, they are shifting from a deeply rooted pre-planned Fordian workflow, to a brave new world that embraces serendipitous spontaneity, parallel processing, ubiquitous presence, creative chaos and cross-breed sharing.

Rosen instinctively guides managers and leaders on a journey of change, where historical evidence is presented with noteworthy lessons. Interesting trends are distilled into pragmatic strategies, with a dose of engaging anecdotes from the think tanks at BMW, Toyota, NASA and Boeing just to name a few.

It's easy to appreciate the power of collaboration if we just look online today. The phenomena of Wikipedia and citizen journalism are testaments to the power of diverse, individuals brought together for a common goal. Rosen translates the most salient bits about how working environments should be designed to facilitate such collaborations.

With attention to the human aesthetic, with his well-designed book provides illustrative working models, as well as break-outs of key phrases in every section, especially handy for the findability of particular topics.

As a business manual, "The Culture of Collaboration" will probably be an effective means for any business to derive untapped creative value from within their own company. [...]

Going Past the Buzzwords of Collaboration with Effective Strategies and Analysis
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-17
Man is a social animal.

While everyone knows this saying do we truly understand its profound implications? As humans, collaboration is built into our DNA and is a large part of our evolutionary success. Look around. Every day we form elaborate groups, companies, government, religions, and softball teams. Now collaboration's competitive value has been exponentially increased by new technologies. Companies are being forced to embrace new methods or be outperformed by those that do.

Evan Rosen is an expert on the subject and this book "Culture of Collaboration" is an essential read.

While collaboration's value is becoming obvious to even the most traditional executivees, but its implementation is not easy. Just as you can't walk into your boardroom and tell everyone to be smarter or more efficient, you can't simply tell your organization to collaborate. Collaboration is a skill with methodologies, best-practices, and tools.
Evan walks us through the important steps to gain the most value from collaboration using inside knowledge from top companies like Toyota, Dreamworks, and HP. He goes over the newest tools and technologies. And perhaps most importantly he covers how to shift from a traditional to a collaborative organization, highlighting pitfalls that many companies fall prey to. He tackles deep questions with solid strategies and examples. For example, how do privacy laws or trade secrets affect collaborative efforts? When choosing collaborative technologies should I focus on asynchronous technologies, such as message boards or synchronous tools such as video conferencing?

As the founder of the first collaborative media creation platform, no one could be a bigger proponent of collaboration than I. And I feel that no one does a better job of highlighting the importance and guiding the organizations to higher results through collaboration than Evan Rosen in his newest book "Culture of Collaboration."

How To Succeed In Business (By Working Together)
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-03
America, once the undisputed business, industrial and technological leader on planet Earth, has surrendered that position to a number of other nations. The most obvious example is the American automotive industry and the Japanese, who took us to school on manufacturing and selling cars about 60 years after Henry Ford told Americans they could have "any color Model-T they want, so long as it's black". The secret weapon these "foreigners" wielded against the American manufacturing monolith was, obviously enough: Collaboration.

Therein lies the crux of Evan Rosen's latest book, a sort of how-to manual for companies of all sizes wishing to maximize the effort and talent of their employees, and create something of value, which usually leads to profit. He describes the ins and outs of business collaboration, from the physical arrangement of furniture and office space, to overcoming the psychological barriers, to the technological advances that allow colleagues on opposite sides of the globe to converse instantly, instead of scheduling a meeting weeks or months in advance and travelling 12,000 miles to get there.

It's a fascinating read, as one hears some remarkable stories of companies and organizations that understood the importance of collaboration before it became fashionable in the USA. Anyone who has spent any time in the American corporate world (or reads "Dilbert" on a regular basis) will be asking themselves why more companies don't practice effective collaboration on a regular basis. The answer may be inertia, job security, (or insecurity), or just good old rugged American individualism. But there is no longer any excuse, with a book like "The Culture of Collaboration" on the market. If you, and your business, want to "create value" (ie profit and success) you will buy copies of this book for yourself and all your managers, quiz them on it, and then put these techniques into practice.

A practical guide to collaboration in the workplace
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-03
The Summary
Evan Rosen has consolidated the latest ideas on collaboration and brought them together into an informative and practical book. Collaboration is becoming more and more important whether you are trying to manage a global workforce or just need to get stove-pipe departments to work together you will learn a lot from this book.

The Audience
The Culture of Collaboration is a practical guide aimed at anyone interested in fostering collaboration in their workplaces. Managers and leaders should definitely check this book out. The ideas around collaboration with a multi-cultural and global work force are extremely interesting to anyone leading off-shore initiatives. The book is full of practical advice that can be leveraged immediately.

The Details
There have been a number of books recently on collaboration from Group Genius, X-Teams to some older titles like `Organizing Genius' and `How Breakthroughs Happen'. There have also been many books on recent technologies that leverage the genius of groups i.e. wikinomics, the wealth of networks. Evan Rosen's book brings all these elements together from the technologies, tools, and theories around collaboration into a practical guide. This is not by any means a lightweight `how-to' guide, but more of a roadmap to not only understand the power of collaboration but also to leverage it in your organization.
Rosen explains the principles of collaboration through personal stories and examples from some new and unique sources. Other books on collaboration use examples from the usual suspects Lockheed's SunkWorks and IDEO but Rosen draws examples from the Mayo Clinic, George Lucas's ILM (Industrial Light and Magic), Boeing and Toyota. The choice of the Mayo clinic was surprising at first and then as Rosen explained the culture behind how the clinic was started and some of their collaborative practices; it became obvious that this was an important and often over-looked example of a collaborative and innovative environment.
While the first half of the book explores the current trends and the need for collaboration, the last few chapters bring the ideas of collaboration together into a practical guide that is worth the price of the book alone. How to use collaboration tools to foster the right culture, which tools to use to solve different issues and challenges and advice to managers and leaders on fostering collaboration.

The Ideas:
Rosen draws from some unique examples and there were many ideas that made me think:
- Presence - the use of tools like IM to foster collaboration across teams. Being able to tell if someone is available or not. The in-box culture is dead and now replaced by tools that incorporate elements of `Presence'
- Why Smoking can get you promoted - ok that wasn't the point that was made, but Rosen does explain that conversations and groups that form around stepping outside for a `smoke', can generate the kind of cross-functional and cross-hierarchical connections that companies need.
- Mayo Clinic's SPARC - as an example of collaboration at work. SPARC gets people out of their usual roles into cross-functional groups in a custom built innovative lab, an open area called the `program support space' which is fitted with everything any innovative group would need.

The Take-Away:
I can't emphasize the practical nature of this book enough. If you are going to read only one book on collaboration and you want to walk away with a guide to foster collaboration at work, then this is the book to get. This is a well written and engaging book and well worth the investment in time to read.

Kes Sampanthar
Inventor of ThinkCube

Networks
Cybergrrl at Work: Tips and Inspiration for the Professional You
Published in Paperback by Berkley Trade (2001-01-01)
Author: Aliza Sherman
List price: $12.95
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $12.95

Average review score:

inspirational!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-13
Aliza is an enormously impressive woman. Not only has she obviously inspired thousands of woman, but she manages to remain humble and uneffected. Is is just those qualities that enable her books to reach out to woman. I highly recommend them all.

Very helpful and inspirational!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-29
Great book for women who want to to know more about the internet and how they can get into the field. Aliza Shermnan gives a lot of practical information on many different positions in the field, what skills are needed and how you can get started. The experiences shared by many women in the book serve as great encouragement for any woman interested in giving it a try, who want to broaden their prospects or who want to get some new ideas on how to further advance their existing business. It's easy reading and fun -- buy it for yourself or somone else as a gift!!

Very useful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-24
This book is an excellent guide for those who are new to the Internet and for those who are veterans -- everyone will find something new and useful. Sherman is a clear and practical writer with lots of experience to back up her recommendations. I would recommend this book to any woman.

Interesting and helpful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-18
Terrific book -- both interesting to read (especially the stories of how other women used the web to become successful) and helpful (containing tips on how you can do it too.) It was also very practical, especially (at least for me)the section on growing your business on the Internet. I've read other books in this area, which were very dry, but this was a fast read and a very helpful one as well. I highly recommended this book -- and you don't have to be a female to enjoy it.

The Old Girls Network
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-14
Lets face it sisters, it is time to help each other to get ahead professionally. Ms. Sherman shares her knowledge and expertise, as well as others for using all the tools available to us. Don't pass up a fun quick read that can make a difference and make your life better.

Networks
Embedded Systems Design using the Rabbit 3000 Microprocessor: Interfacing, Networking, and Application Development
Published in Kindle Edition by Newnes (2004-11-29)
Authors: Kamal Hyder and Bob Perrin
List price: $51.95
New price: $41.56

Average review score:

Great for beginners
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-03
As a relative beginner to the world of embedded systems I was very pleased with the readability and accessibility of this book. From coding examples provided in so many languages, anyone with coding experience can find one they identify with, to real world usage examples that make sense. This book is a great place to start for anyone looking for information on how to use, integrate, or program for, the Rabbit processor. It's also a great place to start for anyone looking for information about how embedded processors can be used.

Truly - A Stunning Book
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-26
It's extremely rare for me to find a technical book that is as captivating as this one. I'm truly shocked at how well written it is and how inspiring the words are. I literally can't put this book down. Strongly recommended.

Excellent Book!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-03
The book has been written by people with a lot of experience in the industry.... in various sections, it goes beyond just building hardware or writing code and offers practical advice that one gains only after a couple of decades in the industry.

Although the title may lead the reader to think the book is focused only on the Rabbit microprocessor, there is useful and practical advice in there for just about any embedded systems designer.

Ingo Cyliax, Contributing Editor, Circuit Celllar Magazine
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-13
Excellent reference on all there is to know about the Rabbit 3000. I found the chapters on interrupts and interfacing to the external world especially usefull resources. Overall, the book is well researched and written and enjoyable to read. I wish all technical books were this good.

EXCELLENT BOOK!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-26
I have been using Rabbit microprocessors for years. I started out with the Rabbit 2000 and now use the Rabbit 3000. This book addresses a lot of the problems I came across while developing software and integrating hardware for the Rabbit. I truly appreciate the authors taking the time to put together such a great book. The CD that came with the book includes all of their project's sample code and compiles the first time (unlike other publishers which require modification to compile and run properly). This book is also a great reference and will not collect dust on my bookshelf!

FYI: My last robot was powered by a Rabbit 2000:

http://www.robotdirectory.org/details.cfm?id=194&cat=4

Have fun developing for the Rabbit 3000!


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