Software Books
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Bathroom readingReview Date: 2006-11-10
Most have for Serious LightWaversReview Date: 2006-07-05
I was very interested in and loved cartooning and character creation in 3D. So I purchased Jonny Gorden's "Cartoon Character Creation-Volume 2". If ya don't know and wanna learn Rigging right, get this book. Jonny be getting off with his techniques in this bad boy. Loved the book.
(Jonny's book covers A through Z in Rigging and Animation mostly plus overviews on general knowledge stuff as well. But since I already learned the basics with "Getting Started" I was able to get deep into Jonny's techniques.)
I was a professional Graphic Designer who wanted to move over to the 3D world, I desired to be a power-user at 3D animation. So I purchased Dan Alban's "LightWave [8]," extremely good learning tool. Dan's book got my doing just about anything I could imagine.
(In Depth book cover almost everything. Big pictures illustrations and nicely written make learn easier. Ya gotta get this one.)
But in some areas I was still creating very slowly. Like how to optimize a detailed and completed scene for a render farm, so that I could not only render, but also render scenes very fast. How to build a scene for a real movie that would render quicker than if I built it another way.
For example, I built a scene which took four months to render on a 4 node render farm of fast G5 with 2 gigs of Ram. I'm thinking that, I've got to be able to create the same scene, but in such as that it would render in say, two weeks. I wanted to learn the fastest power moves, since I work alone in my home studio. I do not have peers and co-worker to exchanged knowledge with
Then, I order this book, and it fit the bill. It helps to complete my learning needs and answered and reconfirmed, other books and technique that I pick up off of the Internet.
This is an excellent book it is a most get. Although I got it for advanced how tos; there is beginner level help here as well. A lot of the dudes and dudettes that I've learned from through downloading Internet QuickTime movies from the Newtek website and other places, these movies are excellent show and tell ways to learn. But with expressions and certain dynamic it is good to have it in a book form as well.
(Since there are so many experts contributing to this book, you get a really balanced guide to knowledge. If you are going to be a power-user, this book completes the other books and knowledge that I have accumulated. You got to it as well.) "1000 Tips and Tricks," book is worth every penny of the cost.
More is moreReview Date: 2004-10-10
That being said, this is a real standout among LightWave books and one I'm proud to be part of. The strength is in the numbers - never before have you gotten such a wide and varied number of opinions in one place. Because there are so many different approachs to creating 3D art, this book is really a must own and it's a book you'll go back to again and again. I keep a copy on my desk, within easy reach and I pick it up for reference or for some quick reading during a render.
It also covers a wide variety of topics, from lighting to surfacing to LScripts. Not every tip is something I agree with, but that's the beauty of this book - there's just so much information here that you'll be finding new things to think about or to add to your work for years to come.
Fantastic but a bit redundantReview Date: 2005-07-28
Yet at the same time, there is much redundancy within the book itself (several tips are essentially identical) and with the reference manual provided by NewTek.
So there are really quite a few less than 1001 super neat and fantabulous tips and tricks here, but there are plenty enough to make the purchase a valuable addition to your reference library for LW8.
Should Be Bundled With the Lightwave CDReview Date: 2004-07-24

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Perfect Study MateReview Date: 2000-06-06
Good Review BookReview Date: 2000-02-12
Excellent BookReview Date: 2000-01-11
A good revision book for passing the examReview Date: 1999-12-29
This book will prep you for what's on the testReview Date: 1999-12-29

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Great book, but needs slight improvementReview Date: 2008-06-26
I would buy it again, even if the previous version is available for free online. It's great to read when you're not near a computer, as (for a programmer) the book is easy enough to follow without needing to try every example yourself.
Great book for learning the Lua language.Review Date: 2008-01-30
Good PIL bookReview Date: 2007-11-17
I was not impressedReview Date: 2007-10-26
"I do not recommend the use of arrays starting at 0 in Lua. Most built-in functions assume that arrays start at index 1, and therefore they will not handle such arrays correctly."
Talk about giving you just enough rope to hang yourself. But it gets even better. Array elements in Lua are to be removed by assigning their indices the value of nil. This is all well and good, but, again in the author's own words:
"Lua uses [the nil] value as a sentinel to find the end of the array. When the array has holes--nil elements inside it--the length operator may assume any of these nil elements as the end marker. Of course, this unpredictability is hardly what you want."
No shoot, Sherlock. So why not get rid of that unpredictability? As I read further I came to the conclusion that this decision was made because doing otherwise would spoil the running theme of the language. Another favorite passage comes from page 32 when discussing the numeric for loop:
"you should never change the value of the control variable: the effect of such changes is unpredictable."
Great! I love unpredictable results. They make so much more sense than raising a predictable exception or pointing out a predictable old syntax error. Let's see now... How else can we anger C programmers? How about if we make it so "a break or return statement can appear only as the last statement of a block"? Wonderful! Now let's get rid of one of the primary attractions of high-level scripting languages--regular expressions--and say we can't include them due to size concerns (we really need to be able to brag about our entire distribution fitting on a single floppy disk, and the PCRE library is just HUGE).
These things are marginally less obnoxious than Python's significant whitespace, but still obnoxious, and apart from the multiple return values thing, I really didn't find any compelling reason to join the Lua fanboy camp in this volume. Maybe if I were a Warcraft player I'd feel differently.
As for the book itself, the writing is terse and very obviously coming from a non-native speaker. The typesetting is atrocious (good typography is one of those things you never really appreciate until it's gone) and the entire thing looks like it was printed on an old laser printer that was low on toner at Kinko's. If it were cheaper, I wouldn't care, but it's not, so I do.
Stick to the free PDF if you really have to learn Lua for something. The changes in 5.1 are not significant enough to warrant a second edition, and the flimsy, smudged paper is really not worth paying for.
All C programmers should have this bookReview Date: 2007-08-06
Lua is very different from C, and so allows a programmer to easily do things that are difficult in C. That makes it a perfect companion language. The only obstacle is training a C programmer to use it! That's where the book becomes useful. It's a quick read and covers all the essentials.
Even better, Lua is so well-connected to C that it is easy to switch back and forth in the course of a typical programming day, writing performance code in C and high-level logic in Lua. It is even possible to easily interact with Lua data structures in C without writing Lua code for situations where the data structures are desirable but Lua code isn't required. If you're looking for a scripting language for your next project, you need to know about Lua, and this book is the quickest way to make an informed decision.


High-level security concepts book.Review Date: 2008-02-17
Few things where this book falls short "Ignorant" to emerging application landscape and the coding complexities in a multi-platform and application integration environment - J2EE, .NET, XML Web Services and SOA. I am sure, the author will agree on those gaps hopefully we see in the next edition of this book.
The book deserves 5 stars for the concepts + illustrations and 3 stars for those keen on development details for distributed applications.
Good book for secure software coding !Review Date: 2007-05-09
Couple of things I QUIBBLE with are... the book does'nt realize the emerging issues and how-to's for build/refactor security for distributed application proliferation as your it - Portals, Web Services and SOA. The way we develop software is changing, the applications are becoming more pervasive and no-longer contained standalone to a system which makes the built-in security brittle impeding the agile business requirements for application/process orchestration, b2b federation and Web based application mashups. I am sure, the author will realize those gaps in the next edition of this book.
Havingsaid - This book is still a must-read for the budding security developer who wants to focus on secure programming and testing.
What is MISSING - You will not find answers for how you do secure web-centric applications, XML Web services - message-level security, identity federation and other b2b application complexities.
The best secure development lifecycle bookReview Date: 2007-07-05
If you're a software developer, Software Security is an essential book to have on your shelf, and you'll also want a secure programming book like Secure Programming with Static Analysis (Addison-Wesley Software Security Series) or the author's own Building Secure Software: How to Avoid Security Problems the Right Way.
Required residing for all software developersReview Date: 2007-03-01
Software Security: Building Security In is a valiant attempt to show software developers how to do just that. The book is the latest step in Gary McGraw's software security series, whose previous titles include Building Secure Software and Exploiting Software.
In past decades, writing secure code was left to the military and banking industry. Today, with everything on networks, all sectors must get into the act.
Much of the problem is that organizations target their security elsewhere--specifically on networks--rather than on software. But so many malicious attacks are directed at software that it is foolish to leave this vulnerability exposed.
McGraw goes into detail not only about writing secure code but also about key related areas, which he terms "the seven touchpoints of software security."
These points comprise code review, architectural risk analysis, penetration testing, risk-based security tests, abuse cases, security requirements, and security operations. A major portion of the book effectively discusses these "touchpoints," making the work a recommended tool for inculcating software developers with a security mind-set.
A powerful book with deep truths for secure developmentReview Date: 2006-11-02
Gary McGraw's book gets my vote as the best of the six because it made the biggest impact on the way I look at the software security problem. First, Gary emphasizes the differences between bugs (coding errors) and flaws (deeper architectural problems). He shows that automated code inspection tools can be applied more or less successfully to the first problem set, but human investigation is required to address the second. Gary applauds the diversity of backgrounds found in today's security professionals, but wonders what will happen when this rag-tag bunch (myself included) is eventually replaced by "formally" trained college security graduates.
Second, Gary explains that although tools cannot replace a flaw-finding human, they can assist programmers trying to avoid writing bugs. Gary is the only author I encountered who acknowledged that it is unrealistic to expect a programmer to keep dozens or hundreds of sound coding practices and historical vulnerabilities in his head while writing software. An automated tool is a powerful way to apply secure coding lessons in a repeatable and measurable manner. Gary also reframed the way I look at software penetration testing, by showing in ch 6 that they are best used to discover environmental and configuration problems of software in production.
Third, Gary is not afraid to point out the problems with other interpretations of the software security problem. I almost fell out of my chair when I read his critique on pp 140-7 and p 213 of Microsoft's improper use of terms like "threat" in their so-called "threat model." Gary is absolutely right to say Microsoft is performing "risk analysis," not "threat analysis." (I laughed when I read him describe Microsoft's "Threat Modeling" as "[t]he unfortunately titled book" on p 310.) I examine this issue deeper in my reviews of Microsoft's books. Gary is also correct when he states on p 153 that "security is more like insurance than it is some kind of investment." I bookmarked the section (pp 292, 296-7) where Gary explained how the "19 Deadly Sins of Software Security" mix "specific types of errors and vulnerability classes and talk about them all at the same level of abstraction." He's also right that the OWASP Top Ten suffers the same problem. Finally, Gary understands the relationships between operators and developers and the importance of security vocabulary.
I was pleasantly surprised by "Software Security". I reviewed an early draft for Addison-Wesley and wondered where the author was taking this book. It ended up being my favorite software security book, easily complementing Gary's earlier book "Building Secure Software." In my opinion, Gary is thinking properly about all the fundamental issues that matter. This book should be distributed to all Microsoft developers to help them frame the software security problem properly.

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bible.Review Date: 2007-07-07
Getz' writing style is remarkably lucid, and there's an example in writing and on CD for just about every concept he teaches.
i bought the paperback version and now that the binding has come apart i keep the book in about five or six different places. i also broke the straps on both of my south american backpacks trying to carry this book (each volume is about 1500 pages long...) If you're going to be programming Access for a while, i'd recommend getting a hardcover edition.
Great great bookReview Date: 2005-12-08
The Gold StandardReview Date: 2006-01-05
Versions of the Access Developer's Handbook have been a staple of professional Access developers since the early days of the Microsoft Access product. My first attempt at serious Access development was during the days of version 1.1. Was that 1993? My team and I recognized the importance and power of this new Windows database product and started to build marketing applications using Access and macros(!) in Windows for Workgroups 3.11. I discovered a copy of the Access 2.0 Developer's Handbook as we migrated to Access v2 and I never looked back. I could not believe the wealth of information in that single volume. I didn't understand much of it, but that was the beauty of it. Here was a reference that revealed secrets and held promises of knowledge to be gained for the inspired reader. Incarnations of this book have remained at my right hand since the first day I opened it.
Whether you need to know more about tables, queries, forms, reports, collections, SQL, relational design, Jet security, multi-user issues, networked databases, or whatever, the Access 2002 Developer's Handbook is the reference for you. It's currently published in two volumes, Desktop and Enterprise editions. Buy both as a set. Combined, they are the gold standard of Microsoft Access reference materials.
Absolute Must-HaveReview Date: 2005-04-26
A Must Have for Serious Access DevelopersReview Date: 2005-06-11

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Out of print, but still the best!Review Date: 2004-09-03
Awesome Active Directory BookReview Date: 2002-12-12
Excellent bookReview Date: 2003-06-30
unlike others.
WowReview Date: 2003-04-24
Awesome Active Directory BookReview Date: 2002-12-12

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Estou muito satisfeito de ter este livro !!!Review Date: 2008-01-29
Como um livro de tutorial foi maravilhoso e me trouxe muito conteudo !!!
Realmente vale a pena !!!
Excellent bookReview Date: 2007-09-06
Great bookReview Date: 2006-09-13
Essential Book for ANY E-Commerce .NET 2.0 Developers!!!Review Date: 2007-02-09
01. Starting off
02. Laying Out the Foundation
03. Creating the Product Catalog: Part I
04. Creating the Product Catalog: Part II
05. Searching the Catalog
06. Improving Performance
07. Receiving Payments Using PayPal
08. Catalog Administration
09. Creating a Custom Shopping Cart
10. Custom Orders
11. Making Product Recommendations
12. Adding Customer Accounts
13. Advanced Customer Orders
14. Order Pipeline
15. Implementing the Pipeline
16. Credit Card Transactions
17. Integrating with Amazon
Tack on 2 appendixes to the end and you have a MUST-HAVE book for anyone that is looking to achieve the same goals that this books does!!
***** HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Great ASP.Net 2.0 E-Commerce Primer/ReferenceReview Date: 2006-11-09
The authors have a great approach to design that anyone doing E-Commerce would do well to follow. Better yet they mention the pros and cons of different approaches and explain why they chose their approach. I've been thrilled to learn some new strategies to improve performance that I hadn't considered before as well as some new features in ASP.Net and ADO 2.0 that I wasn't aware of.
The only negative, for me, is the database as well as ADO basics this book spends many pages covering. However there's plenty of worthwhile content to justify the price. So if you are familiar with database design and have a working knowledge of ADO you can just skip past those pages. I do recommend you skim thru them though as, like me, you may learn some new 2.0 features you weren't aware of.
The book covered all my E-Commerce questions: catalog design, how to scale up/performance considerations, SSL, Security issues, credit card processing, and costs involved. They even point you in the direction of a few recommended credit card processing businesses. Best of all they approach the site creation in such a way you can quickly get up and going and then later on focus on fine tuning payment options and really making the site standout with features.

George ShrinksReview Date: 2008-05-15
George Sponge SKi's! Review Date: 2008-03-10
The cutest kids book ever!!!!Review Date: 2007-04-24
George Shrinks Review Date: 2007-04-20
I gave this book a five because a little kid name George has a dream of him being small like a "teddy bear". When he had the dream he was in his bed sleeping, his mom left a note of chores and he was doing the chores. The "scary" part in the book was when the cat sees George and thinks his is a toy and the cat tries to put his claw on him ,but George runs and hides from the cat. This book is great and I think William took a long time doing the cover and pictures and I say the book cover and pictures are really beautiful. I love this book because he had a dream that was weird that he was small and that he had to do big chores. I would recommend this book because it is a cute book for a 1st and 2nd graders I think they will love it because all of the cute pictures and the funny pictures they would love to read this book a lot of times and I would like to some day read it again because it would be so nice to read it over and over.
must have Review Date: 2007-02-07

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Outstanding reference for LotusScript and JavaReview Date: 2000-05-12
Hatter and Banks aren't wordy and target this book strictly at the experienced developer looking for a reference work. That makes this incredibly useful. These days I carry this book (thankfully light despite being 700 pages) between sites all the time. The lovely posters from Lotus might list all the properties and methods, but these guys provide the details underneath it.
The remarks on each class are pertinent, yet brief (as for NotesRichTextItem, "you must call the save method of the parent Notes document to save the data to disk") They include examples not only for classes, but also occasionally for methods and properties.
Interestingly, a quick check of the index for 'Index, databases' found only a reference to the updateFTIndex method for Java Database class and not to the LotusScript NotesDatabase class, while 'Registering Users' listed the LotusScript page and not the Java one. Perhaps the editors need to work on that. Fortunately, they provide a lot of cross-references on the pages, giving you page numbers for the classes mentioned in the text, reducing the need to refer to the table of contents or the index.
The print's small, but they use fonts, abbreviations and familiar symbols to get the message across clearly.
On balance, it's well worth the (money) I paid Amazon for it - it probably saved me an hour today and none of our hours come cheap, do they?
Only LotusScript Reference you'll needReview Date: 2000-06-07
Lotus Notes & Domino Essential ReferenceReview Date: 2000-05-16
The authors did a great job providing examples of how the properties and methods are used. I haven't written any Java yet, but when I do this book will be right by my side!
This a reference book and not for beginnersReview Date: 2002-01-30
If you are an intermediate or experienced Notes developer this is a terrific book, I have it by my desk all the time.
If you want a book to teach you LotusScript but Practical LotusScript it's great!
Excellent reference!Review Date: 2000-06-06
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MAYO CLINIC FAMILY HEALTH THIRD EDITIONReview Date: 2008-03-25
Healthy LivingReview Date: 2007-12-05
Great Book!Review Date: 2007-08-07
Mayo Clinic - Family Health BookReview Date: 2006-08-07
My husband recently became ill and was hospitalized. We were able to pinpoint symptoms in the book which helped us along with our health provider get appropriate testing and treatment for his condition.
With healthcare today, we must be "informed consumers".
I have worked nearly 35 years in clinical laboratory medicine and I still learn something new everyday....this book certainly helps.
A book I very much want to get Review Date: 2006-03-19
They are:
Part I: Living Well II: Common Conditions and Concerns Through Life's Stages III: Making Sense of Your Symptoms
IV: First Aid and Emergency Care VisualGuide: Anatomy and Common Disorders Part V: Diseases and Disorders
VI: Tests and Treatments
The great prayer is that most of what one learns from reading and going through this guide will not have to be useful or relevant.
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is making a big red ring around my a _ _ , Empire of the Sun is starting I'll sit here and watch that too! It's cold in here, is that true about cold surfaces and what they do to your *%@^( ?