Computers Books
Related Subjects: Hacking Graphics Internet Security Software Hardware Ethics Intranet Performance and Capacity Data Communications Emulators Algorithms Home Automation Multimedia Programming Robotics Systems Desktop Publishing Supercomputing Parallel Computing Bulletin Board Systems Consultants Mobile Computing Companies Organizations Human-Computer Interaction CAD and CAM Directories Artificial Intelligence Shopping Virtual Reality Education History Artificial Life Open Source Data Formats Computer Science Publications Usenet E-Books Speech Technology
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Excellent intermediate/advanced security bookReview Date: 2008-02-02
Great BookReview Date: 2007-07-25
Excellent readReview Date: 2007-01-17
Belongs on all IT security professionals' bookshelvesReview Date: 2007-03-29
The definitive text on Windows rootkits, applicable in 2005 or 2007Review Date: 2007-06-23
Hoglund and Butler should be commended for writing this book. It really does assemble the parts (meaning techniques and code) necessary to implement a Windows rootkit, at least prior to Windows Vista. My only concern is that, at times, the authors are not as clear as I hoped they might be. This is probably due to the fact that they are two of the best rootkit writers on the planet, so they probably do not remember what it was like to not understand "hooking" and other techniques.
In some ways Rootkits is probably a book best suited for other experts (like many who wrote reviews here). That leaves beginners (like myself) wishing for a little more foundation or direct language prior to reading about implementation tricks.
One of the greatest strengths of this book, however, is the degree to which it exposes the internal workings of Windows. For greatest effect it's probably worth reading Microsoft Windows Internals, Fourth Edition by Russinovich and Solomon first.
Note that although I found the direct approach of the BSD rootkits book better for my learning style, this book by Hoglund and Butler is deeper in several areas. In fact, those who liked the BSD rootkits book would do well to read its Windows counterpart to learn tricks from Hoglund and Butler.

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Not a bad place to startReview Date: 2008-02-10
Okay for a non-seasoned professionalReview Date: 2007-09-11
A very useful readReview Date: 2007-10-10
The book was easy to follow and information flowed well through it. 2 thumbs up
-Skipp
Great Book for the inspiring Computer EntrepreneurReview Date: 2007-12-14
Definitely worth the money, so far the only book that I've found that details the steps of starting your own business!
Not for the pre-biz...for the computer bizReview Date: 2007-09-29


Amazing!Review Date: 2000-10-31
This book was good to read too and I am using it at my job and fixing some of the problems we've had with WINS and VPN based on what I learned. Great book and best study guide for the test.
Good bookReview Date: 2000-08-02
Good TCP/IP and Networking BookReview Date: 2000-08-31
TCP/IP is revealed to the cluelessReview Date: 2000-08-15
This book is unreal in how good things are explained. Great detail in describing RRAS, WINS, DNS, and the TCP stack. Using the information in the book I am now up to speed on TCP/IP. Enough to pass the 70-216 test! Not bad for a NT MCSE!
For Real, this book helped a lot. I owe the author's a beer on this one.
Excellent Coverage of Win2k Net ServicesReview Date: 2000-08-04
They cover Windows 2000 TCP/IP from top to bottom. WINS, DNS, DHCP, RRAS, IIS, routing and network devices. Its all there, and its filled with little known factoids that makes me want to keep reading and have another "aha!" experience.
This book also was the major reason I passed the Microsoft 216 exam so easily. Although I didn't buy it to pass the exam, they seem to cover all the material that the exam covered. A nice bonus. I wish they made the book longer, because I'm sure they could have said a lot more that I would like to read about.
This book isn't for beginners, but neither is Windows 2000. I think once the reader is ready to manage Windows 2000, they'll be ready to get the most out of this exceptional book.


Great thoughts, presented perfectly for busy peopleReview Date: 2008-03-21
Such is the nature of writing about a topic where 1) the author makes his money selling branding services; 2) he doesn't believe in hard numbers to prove points, harboring the predictable anti-research position that is both a great strength and weakness of this book and books like this (i.e. Blink). It also may be the most acceptable way to write a book that is not so dry and academic that nobody would want to read it.
But the story being told is a great one and it is really well told. Neumeier needs to get a lot of credit for presenting ideas simply (not simplistically) which many other authors would make very complicated. The book is also just really well thought out so that it is thoroughly enjoyable to read even as you get into some pretty important topics that others might get bogged down in jargon or overly long explanations. The book also gets high markst for not only discussing what a "zag" is but also showing you how you can get there if you follow his clearly outlined process.
So while the book is clearly a campaign for what he believes versus an objective look at branding, it is great read and I would recommend it for anyone working in marketing/branding that wants a refresher or reminder about what you should be thinking about in our ever-changing world.
ZAGGINGReview Date: 2008-02-09
It is:
- Fun to read
- Openminding
It provides great practical ideas. You can apply the 17 steps to differentiation in your work place righ away.
I could not stop reading it.
Zag is ZagworthyReview Date: 2007-09-29
Zag hones in on one element discussed in the Brand Gap - differentiation - and expands it into a 200-so page book. According to Neumeier, differentiation, or creating zag, is one of the most important elements of branding - and it needs to happen at every step of the way, from conception to naming to marketing.
The great thing about Zag is the way it presents the information - much like in the Brand Gap it follows a 'whiteboard', graphic-heavy, basic (but important) facts. This time around however, it pairs the basic format with a strong, easy-to-follow example through the faux development of an educational wine bar chain.
Neumeier then takes the reader through 17 steps (including some helpful exercises) you should take as a business owner, venture capitalist, or advertising professional when determining whether your product is zagworthy - or how to make it so it is.
In terms of why I gave the book 4 stars as opposed to 5...The last section of the book - once the 17 steps are completed and the wine bar is 'fully developed' - is a little bit dense/doesn't seem to flow as well as the rest of the book/series.
Also there is a decent amount of repetition between Zag and the Brand Gap, and I am hesitant in believing that people would pick up one without the other. Although it makes sense to reinforce the principles (and sell more books I'm sure) in some cases, it almost made it hard to differentiate some of the messages between the books, making me feel a bit cheated in that I paid money to read the same pages over.
I have a hunch Neumeier might take the 5 main principles found in The Brand gap and expand each of them into books like Zag did for differentiation - and I can't fault him for doing so. Zag is definitely an improvement on The Brand Gap in that it offers a focused "here's exactly what you can do" strategy, but it still remains general enough that virtually any level of professional (student, beginner, executive etc.) can sit down and walk away a couple of hours later feeling like they learned something.
Zag Zag Zigidy Zag de ZagReview Date: 2007-09-21
A book that zagsReview Date: 2007-08-23
This book provides a unique approach from a marketer's point of view to the concept of real differentiation in the marketplace. "When everybody zigs, zag". Stop being a follower, an imitator, and start being different, start zagging.
You can't stop reading this book, once you get started. It will take you one or two hours, which doesn't mean the author is not providing details and deep insights. In fact, he gives what it takes to make his points clear, captivating, and consistent.
David Aaker says in the back cover of this book: "The presentation alone is worth the price of the book". He is absolutely right. This book zags.

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This should not come as a surpriseReview Date: 2005-02-16
To soonReview Date: 2002-11-12
Because it's so good!
And now the MX version is out,
but I already have the Flash 5 one!
Anybody wants to buy it off me,
so I can get the new issue?
;-)
Clone this author! The BEST actionscript book I've read!Review Date: 2002-05-30
Hits the MarkReview Date: 2002-04-10
This is a GREAT book for the graphic/web designer wanting to learn actionscript. I own or have read many others that don't cover the basics or the thought processes behind writing in a scripting language. Most books on this topic started out over my head with little explaination and were accompanied by buggy and/or old code. With clear and consice writing, Philip uses the first half of the book to fully explain programming concepts as they pertain to scripting in Flash, and then follows up with examples of how to implement these ideas.
I can't say enough about how far this book has taken me into the scripting world. Kudos to Kerman.
WOW - Buy it Buy it Buy it!Review Date: 2002-04-24
But if you're actually interested in learning to program ActionScript this is the first and only book you should buy.
Phillip Kerman explains everything in a clear understandable way and approaches the ideas of good programming as opposed to bad as well as the actual language itself. This alone will save you hours of re-doing what you've already done. Phillip gets you thinking like a programmer (a fairly new concept to a lot of designers trying to make their Flash more interactive.) Learn to design completely independent re-usable interfaces so that not only are you developing advanced interactive web-applications, you're also building a library of sample re-usable building blocks that you can re-use over and over.
Even if you're new to the language, take some tutorials online to get the basics and then buy this book. Read it and do the tutorials in it and soon you will be programming like a professional in no time. This is the best book on ActionScripting period! and I own 16 books on Flash Development!

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articulate and conciseReview Date: 2007-04-26
Good on principles, but practices could be more dev-relatedReview Date: 2005-04-18
The one thing I would've liked was for this book to get off the fence and decide to be software-related. Almost every example is software related (except for the basketball analogy that got beaten to death...), but it goes out of the way not to specify software practices because this is about arbitrary project management. The book's in the "Agile Software Development Series" and the author is primarily a software consultant. I'd prefer it stuck to software rather than trying to go for broader appeal because there were several practice areas where detail was elided on that basis and could've really helped make the practices more concrete.
Also, it would've been nice to have a little grid mapping up common-day software development methodologies like Scrum, XP, FDD, and DSDM against the practices in the book. I tried to do it in my head, but once you get past 5x5, it's something that should've been provided.
A Practical GuideReview Date: 2006-08-29
A bit disappointingReview Date: 2007-02-09
Takes human behavior into accountReview Date: 2005-07-14
The concepts covered here, if really absorbed and understood, can benefit any project. I found Chapter 7 to be the most valuable for my current product development team, and ordered copies of the book for all my managers.


An excellent introduction to RubyReview Date: 2008-03-29
Very helpful and readable.Review Date: 2008-02-08
I've learned a great deal very quickly, I'd recommend this book to anyone who is wanting to learn Ruby who zero to advanced programming experience.
a very good introduction to Ruby - and to programmingReview Date: 2008-03-04
Cooper's writing style is concise and clear. Examples are explained well. After having worked through books on AppleScript and Objective-C I wish they had been written by Cooper as well.
5 stars!
Best Intro to a programming language I have readReview Date: 2008-02-21
Great book to learn RubyReview Date: 2008-02-05
The book then walks the reader through building a text analyzer program. Of course you to know more to create more complex programs and the author delivers a more advanced discussion of classes objects and modules. And no program is complete without documentation, built in error handling and testing. The author goes over these and other items in detail. Finally, in Chapter 12, you develop a much larger Ruby application by writing a bot program. The book ends with a discussion of Ruby on rails.
The book contains several excellent appendices and is filled with code examples. Beginning Ruby is highly recommend to anybody interested in this programming language and provides sufficient information to write basic programs without any difficulty.

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Great reference slightly marred by poor productionReview Date: 2008-04-03
Topics range from some of the more mundane, technical aspects of the CIO position, and further the old "business vs. tech" stereotypes, but other chapters such as "The First 90 Days" and the more strategy-oriented chapters are quite good.
Aside from the relatively minor "'the business' is evil" stuff, the book is marred by poor production. There are several spelling and grammatical errors, and the graphics are inconsistent and some of poor quality. The great content is mildly hindered by what appears to be poor editing and a rush job by the publisher.
Patrick Gray, author of Breakthrough IT: Supercharging Organizational Value Through Technology
Variety of personal insights from people who really do the jobReview Date: 2007-11-18
If you're not in IT management, probably not a very exciting book. But if you are, it gives you guidance from the varied real experiences of a lot of CIOs--people that you probably wouldn't hear from any other way.
Superb compilation of knowledge & experienceReview Date: 2004-06-21
Among the articles I especially like are:
- The First 90 Days, by Mark Egan, which contains actionable plans that will get the new CIO (or other senior IT executive) quickly moving in the right direction.
- IT Organization, by Guy de Meester, in particular the challenges of centralization vs. decentraliztion, and organizational models in general. If this area is your focus I highly recommend additional reading: "Decentralization: Fantasies, Failings, and Fundamentals" (ISBN 0964163535) and "RoadMap: How to understand, diagnose, and fix your organization" (ISBN 0964163527), both of which go into great detail and provide an exceptionally effective approach.
- Governance, by Danny Maco, which is conspicuously missing in organizations large and small - or is often done incorrectly if done at all.
- Budgeting, by Bob Denis, Maureen Vavra, John Dick ... you'd think IT has this basic function under control, but sadly not. Read this article for excellent advice.
- The Metrics of IT: Management by Measurement, by Shel Waggener and Steve Zoppi. One of my favorite topics, and this team provides outstanding advice and keen insights.
Other articles are as well written, and span topics from architecture to strategic planning. Taken as a whole, this is a sourcebook that is filled with both knowledge and experience, and should be on the desk of every CIO, seasoned and new. I also recommend visiting the site that supports this book (paste the ASIN number, B0001EHNFK, into the search box for all products on this page). The site contains additional articles, news and other books in this series that CIOs, IT managers at all levels, and subject matter experts will find useful.
CIO Wisdom, Indeed !!Review Date: 2004-03-06
If the book has a weakness, it is that there is so much specific information here that it will likely take multiple readings to glean all of it.
I think this book should be required reading for all CIOs ... and if you really want to start something, get a copy for everyone on your IT staff!
CIO Reference ManualReview Date: 2004-08-26
My only critique is that some of the concepts discussed in the book where not fully flushed out when the author was talking about solutions. Of course there have been entire books written on some of the topics covered in CIO wisdom.
I was particularly impressed by the Communications, Governance, Marketing and the Business Intelligence chapters.

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An Easy Read of Fantastic InformationReview Date: 2003-08-12
Definately five *****
A MUST HAVE BOOK FOR ANYONE DEALING WITH CANCER!!!Review Date: 2003-11-03
Pays for itself in 10 minutesReview Date: 2005-02-08
Cutting Edge!!!Review Date: 2003-11-10
Had I known then what I know now...Review Date: 2007-05-14

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Best wireless analysis book.Review Date: 2006-04-10
A must have for wireless professionalsReview Date: 2005-03-05
Excellent and detailed book about the 802.11 technologyReview Date: 2005-04-12
It goes over every field in the 802.11 packets, packet types, etc.
Now, if you're studying for the CWAP exam, you should read it twice and make sure you understand all that is explained in the book.
I used this book on my CWAP exam preparation, and I passed it.
This book is excellentReview Date: 2005-01-31
I have not come across anything related to wireless analysis that I needed to implement that was not discussed or referenced in this book.
The knowledge in this book should be added to your wireless toolkit, even if you are not going to be taking the test.
Great book!
Ranj.
Secure-Wireless Ltd.
This review was helpful to you..................
A great book with potential to be an all time great oneReview Date: 2005-01-25
My other issue is that the authors state that PCF is not wildly used and will only be covered in a summary fashion yet there is a lot of detail about PCF.
I disagree with the other reviewers about trace screens there should be more, see the Cisco press 802.11 book.
The layout of the frames and operation are very good and the book does make learning this topic a little easier. I did learn a few new things that I didn't get from the Cisco press book. I used the book mostly for the CWAP went through 4 reads plus 4 read of the Cisco press. I labbed a lot of the protocol traces to learn. The book is very good and does make it easier to learn and grasp. But, there is a lot to cover in this text for the exam. I was able to pass on the first attempt with a decent score.
The book, although very good for a first edition, does have a lot of errors and the errata is growing.
I and others have posted many of the errors to be included in the errata on the CWNP forum.
Overall it is an excellent book but these inconsistencies should be corrected in the second edition. It has the potential to be one of those all time great guides and professional reference once the errors are corrected.
Worth every penny and worth taking the CWAP. I learned a lot from this book....
Related Subjects: Hacking Graphics Internet Security Software Hardware Ethics Intranet Performance and Capacity Data Communications Emulators Algorithms Home Automation Multimedia Programming Robotics Systems Desktop Publishing Supercomputing Parallel Computing Bulletin Board Systems Consultants Mobile Computing Companies Organizations Human-Computer Interaction CAD and CAM Directories Artificial Intelligence Shopping Virtual Reality Education History Artificial Life Open Source Data Formats Computer Science Publications Usenet E-Books Speech Technology
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The book's title should be obvious enough; this is NOT a book of defenses. However, if you understand these attacks you will be better equiped to deal with them when they happen. This book is no replacement for hands-on training in person with a qualified instructor such as at the SANS Institute, but it is an excellent supplement.