Languages Books
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Used price: $70.66

An excellent choiceReview Date: 2007-01-30
Worth Your Money!!!!!Review Date: 2006-11-10
Lots of Help for Publishers and Would-Be PublishersReview Date: 2002-11-23
Two of the areas in which this book excels are the information on e-books and e-publishers and the extensive appendix of resources. Many of the resources, such as organizations, are of special interest to women and minority writers.
If you are thinking about publishing a book, start by investing in this book. It can save you time and money and help make your project successful.
Informative, money and time-saving bookReview Date: 2003-03-08
My Pick for Aspiring WritersReview Date: 2005-04-11

Used price: $5.11

The Over-50 Spelling BeeReview Date: 2008-09-11
This book has been a great asset in learning word origins and the common spellings associated with the particular languages from which different words come. I've used this book a lot and continue to refer to it as I study my new hobby. I'd buy it again if I didn't already have it!
How to Spell Like a ChampReview Date: 2007-03-30
Bravo!Review Date: 2007-04-06
Three authors were involved in writing this book: Carolyn Andrew, Barrie Trinkle, and Paige Kimble. Carolyn Andrew's son won the national spelling bee in 1994, Barrie Trinkle won it in 1973, and Paige Kimble won it in 1981. My son was so motivated, and learned so much, he worked hard, and in result, won his school spelling bee, and got to compete in the regional spelling bee. In the regionals, he placed third. THIRD!!! I WAS SO HAPPY FOR HIM! I know he is excited about next year's spelling bee. You HAVE to buy this book. I would also highly recommend watching the movie Spellbound.
Want to go to Scripps? This is a great resource!Review Date: 2007-03-12
Worth ItReview Date: 2007-12-31
This Champ book has a nice layout. You'll get to see previous national spellers, see what some spellers chose as careers, spelling rules, most common misspelled words and spelling games. I probably read the book more then my 5th grader did. However he did win his school bee, his district bee, and placed 5th at his regional bee.
The CD in nice too. Warning: The printer put a small slip of paper inside the book for words in the book that are misspelled accidently. Make sure you take an inkpen and change the spellings in the book before you hand it to your child. Chances are the little slip of paper will become lost.

Used price: $22.07

How To Write A Children's Picture Book Vol IIReview Date: 2007-12-29
A Constant CompanionReview Date: 2007-01-01
A must have for picture book writersReview Date: 2007-09-04
How to write a Children's Picture BookReview Date: 2007-03-22
Very helpfulReview Date: 2007-10-07

Used price: $84.95

Post Industrial Era in Hong Kong.Review Date: 2002-12-27
After the Rapid changes of Internet Age, Globalization is the next development in the coming decade. But it makes more competition and prices down in the Global markets. All the traditonal and industrial products are over supply than demand in these two years.
When you think back on the rapid development in Computer and Internet business since year 2000, they have over one time growth for every 18 months and the price is down for 50%. Thus, it makes the competition are so quicky and fast in year 2002 or even in the coming decade.
" Post Industrial Era " is coming now. It means that all the industrial products are over supply in the Global markets. Now we are needing the Elite people and knowledge workers to help all industries to re-fresh and re-build their new roads. High-tech skills and people are welcome in the developmet of Globalization.
New Business models and E-business structures are the only way for us to go and keep on running in the year 2003!
In order to keep your business in the rapid growth of the global markets, please try to absorb more Elite people in your Corporation in time.
Post Industrial Era in Hong Kong.Review Date: 2002-12-27
After the Rapid changes of Internet Age, Globalization is the next development in the coming decade. But it makes more competition and prices down in the Global markets. All the traditonal and industrial products are over supply than demand in these two years.
When you think back on the rapid development in Computer and Internet business since year 2000, they have over one time growth for every 18 months and the price is down for 50%. Thus, it makes the competition are so quicky and fast in year 2002 or even in the coming decade.
" Post Industrial Era " is coming now. It means that all the industrial products are over supply in the Global markets. Now we are needing the Elite people and knowledge workers to help all industries to re-fresh and re-build their new roads. High-tech skills and people are welcome in the developmet of Globalization.
New Business models and E-business structures are the only way for us to go and keep on running in the year 2003!
In order to keep your business in the rapid growth of the global markets, please try to absorb more Elite people in your Corporation in time.
Post Industrial Era in Hong Kong.Review Date: 2002-12-27
After the Rapid changes of Internet Age, Globalization is the next development in the coming decade. But it makes more competition and prices down in the Global markets. All the traditonal and industrial products are over supply than demand in these two years.
When you think back on the rapid development in Computer and Internet business since year 2000, they have over one time growth for every 18 months and the price is down for 50%. Thus, it makes the competition are so quicky and fast in year 2002 or even in the coming decade.
" Post Industrial Era " is coming now. It means that all the industrial products are over supply in the Global markets. Now we are needing the Elite people and knowledge workers to help all industries to re-fresh and re-build their new roads. High-tech skills and people are welcome in the developmet of Globalization.
New Business models and E-business structures are the only way for us to go and keep on running in the year 2003!
In order to keep your business in the rapid growth of the global markets, please try to absorb more Elite people in your Corporation in time.
Post Industrial Era in Hong Kong.Review Date: 2002-12-27
After the Rapid changes of Internet Age, Globalization is the next development in the coming decade. But it makes more competition and prices down in the Global markets. All the traditonal and industrial products are over supply than demand in these two years.
When you think back on the rapid development in Computer and Internet business since year 2000, they have over one time growth for every 18 months and the price is down for 50%. Thus, it makes the competition are so quicky and fast in year 2002 or even in the coming decade.
" Post Industrial Era " is coming now. It means that all the industrial products are over supply in the Global markets. Now we are needing the Elite people and knowledge workers to help all industries to re-fresh and re-build their new roads. High-tech skills and people are welcome in the developmet of Globalization.
New Business models and E-business structures are the only way for us to go and keep on running in the year 2003!
In order to keep your business in the rapid growth of the global markets, please try to absorb more Elite people in your Corporation in time.
Post Industrial Era in Hong Kong.Review Date: 2002-12-27
After the Rapid changes of Internet Age, Globalization is the next development in the coming decade. But it makes more competition and prices down in the Global markets. All the traditonal and industrial products are over supply than demand in these two years.
When you think back on the rapid development in Computer and Internet business since year 2000, they have over one time growth for every 18 months and the price is down for 50%. Thus, it makes the competition are so quicky and fast in year 2002 or even in the coming decade.
" Post Industrial Era " is coming now. It means that all the industrial products are over supply in the Global markets. Now we are needing the Elite people and knowledge workers to help all industries to re-fresh and re-build their new roads. High-tech skills and people are welcome in the developmet of Globalization.
New Business models and E-business structures are the only way for us to go and keep on running in the year 2003!
In order to keep your business in the rapid growth of the global markets, please try to absorb more Elite people in your Corporation in time.

Used price: $39.95

TV Storytelling At Its BestReview Date: 2008-03-06
It Takes More Than Good Looks...Review Date: 2008-02-17
Since he is a great storyteller, Freedman's book doesn't read like a textbook. It reads like a good book. The insights, lessons, and tips are all in there, but they are woven within funny, interesting, and unforgettable stories from the field.
I would recommend this book to anyone who is thinking about a career in video journalism, or those who are already working and want to know how to push to the next level.
Buy the book, read it, then read it again.Review Date: 2007-11-22
Leaning the craft of television news reporting is a different ballgame. In, It Takes More than Good Looks to Succeed at TV News Reporting, Wayne Freedman shows what it takes to become one of the very best.
This book offers practical, easy to use tips to anyone in the business. The challenges and frustrations Wayne describes will happen to you, count on it. Just as important, he explains ways to overcome those obstacles. Regardless of your experience level, this book is crammed full of useful tips that can improve your work.
But this is not only a collection of "how to" tips.
It Takes More than Good Looks to Succeed at TV News Reporting, inspired me. Those of us lucky enough to make a career of TV news have the best, most interesting jobs around. Thanks to Wayne we now have a playbook to make ourselves, and our work, even better!
Interested in aspiring to the next level of television reporting? Review Date: 2007-09-28
Wayne's the real deal!Review Date: 2007-06-05
I'm a former television producer and news director and I've always greatly admired Wayne's work, and his ability to sweep the Emmy awards every time. He's consistently brilliant and can turn the most mundane topic into a memorable visual story. His book is required reading for my television journalism students and should be read and re-read by every aspiring or novice television journalist, along with many veterans. This book makes teaching 'basic training' to up-and-coming video journalists MUCH easier. Not only is this book useful and a peek into a bright creative mind, it's just a good read...entertaining and hard to put down, with lots of great stories and insight! It's a keeper.

Used price: $6.79

A great approach to beginning JapaneseReview Date: 2001-07-27
This is worth doing if you dont have a lot of time and need some survival Japanese.
The BestReview Date: 2001-06-01
Japanese--Pimsleur Basic (ABRIDGED)Review Date: 2000-05-25
So far, I've found the Japanese tape to be the pick of the litter, followed by Swiss German, Haitian Creole, and Western Armenian. I couldn't stand more than a few minutes of German and Spanish, which I already know, but for someone else, they might be just the ticket.
Again, if you want a good place to start with Japanese, Pimsleur makes it a walk in the park.
Very useful!Review Date: 2000-07-31
Well Worth The Price To Get Started SpeakingReview Date: 2001-09-03

Used price: $0.26

good reference for C++ programmersReview Date: 2003-05-22
It also covers some Java libraries and briefly outlays applets. There does not seem to be any coverage of servlets or server-side programming.
As good a reference as it is, it seems to be missing some things, most notably initializations. There are pieces of Java code I've seen something like:
subr1(new Foobar {blah(){foo;} blah1(){bar;}});
i.e., a class (Foobar) is being initialized dynamically before calling a function subr1(). The exact circumstances of initialization of variables and dynamic classes are not covered at all in this book.
Other than that, this book is great.
Swiss Army Knife of Java manualsReview Date: 2002-09-26
And like JIAN, there is a good amount of reference material in this book, not with the extended detail of JIAN, but enough to get by most of the stumbling stones one encounters while programming.
As a student, I can only carry so many books in my backpack; when I'm programming in the university labs, I want concise and useful as my qualities. At home, I have my Java reference library (CJ, JIAN, etc.), which I consult when I'm at a quandary; for portability and my lab work, this book is the Swiss Army knife of references, one that I carry regularly, and one that can solve about 75-80% of Java problems I encounter.
Swiss Army Knife of Java manualsReview Date: 2002-09-26
And like JIAN, there is a good amount of reference material in this book, not with the extended detail of JIAN, but enough to get by most of the stumbling stones one encounters while programming.
As a student, I can only carry so many books in my backpack; when I'm programming in the university labs, I want concise and useful as my qualities. At home, I have my Java reference library (CJ, JIAN, etc.), which I consult when I'm at a quandary; for portability and my lab work, this book is the Swiss Army knife of references, one that I carry regularly, and one that can solve about 75-80% of Java problems I encounter.
Swiss Army Knife of Java manualsReview Date: 2002-09-26
And like JIAN, there is a good amount of reference material in this book, not with the extended detail of JIAN, but enough to get by most of the stumbling stones one encounters while programming.
As a student, I can only carry so many books in my backpack; when I'm programming in the university labs, I want concise and useful as my qualities. At home, I have my Java reference library (CJ, JIAN, etc.), which I consult when I'm at a quandary; for portability and my lab work, this book is the Swiss Army knife of references, one that I carry regularly, and one that can solve about 75-80% of Java problems I encounter.
Swiss Army Knife of Java manualsReview Date: 2002-09-26
And like JIAN, there is a good amount of reference material in this book, not with the extended detail of JIAN, but enough to get by most of the stumbling stones one encounters while programming.
As a student, I can only carry so many books in my backpack; when I'm programming in the university labs, I want concise and useful as my qualities. At home, I have my Java reference library (CJ, JIAN, etc.), which I consult when I'm at a quandary; for portability and my lab work, this book is the Swiss Army knife of references, one that I carry regularly, and one that can solve about 75-80% of Java problems I encounter.

Used price: $38.39

Nice BookReview Date: 2006-11-09
doesn't cover all of Numerical calculus and not all of mathematical proofs but great if you are looking study practical programming with Java.
I recommend this book only if you know Java and have basic numerical knowledge.
Great coverage of numerical computing in JavaReview Date: 2007-01-03
Part 1: WHY GOOD COMPUTATIONS GO BAD - Simply copying formulas out of a math or statistics textbook to plug into a program will almost certainly lead to wrong results. The first part of this book covers the pitfalls of basic numerical computation.
Chapter 1 discusses floating-point numbers in general and how they're different from the real numbers of mathematics. Not understanding these differences, such as the occurrence of roundoff errors, and not obeying some basic laws of algebra can lead to computations that go bad.
Chapter 2 looks at the seemingly benign integer types. They don't behave entirely as the whole numbers of mathematics do. Arithmetic operations such as addition, subtraction, and multiplication take place not on a number line, but on a clock face.
Chapter 3 examines how Java implements its floating-point types. The chapter examines the IEEE 754 floating-point standard and shows how well Java meets its provisions.
Part 2: ITERATIVE COMPUTATIONS - Computers are certainly good at looping, and many computations are iterative. But loops are where errors can build up and overwhelm the chance for any meaningful results.
Chapter 4 shows that even seemingly innocuous operations, such as summing a list of numbers, can cause trouble. Examples show how running floating-point sums can gradually lose precision and offer some ways to prevent this from happening.
Chapter 5 is about finding the roots of an algebraic equation, which is another way of saying, "Solve for x." It introduces several iterative algorithms that converge upon solutions: bisection, regula falsi, improved regula falsi, secant, Newton's, and fixed-point. This chapter also discusses how to decide which algorithm is appropriate.
Chapter 6 poses the question, Given a set of points in a plane, can you construct a smooth curve that passes through all the points, or how about a straight line that passes the closest to all the points? This chapter presents algorithms for polynomial interpolation and linear regression.
Chapter 7 tackles some integration problems from freshman calculus, but it solves them numerically. It introduces two basic algorithms, the trapezoidal algorithm and Simpson's algorithm.
Chapter 8 is about solving differential equations numerically. It covers several popular algorithms, Euler's, predictor-corrector, and Runge-Kutta.
Part 3: A MATRIX PACKAGE - This part of the book incrementally develops a practical matrix package. You can then import the classes of this package into any Java application that uses matrices.
Chapter 9 develops the matrix class for the basic operations of addition, subtraction, and multiplication. It also covers subclasses for vectors and square matrices. The chapter's interactive demo uses graphic transformation matrices to animate a three-dimensional wire-frame cube.
Chapter 10 first reviews the manual procedure you learned in high school to solve systems of linear equations. It then introduces LU decomposition to solve linear systems using matrices. An interactive demo creates polynomial regression functions of any order from 1 through 9, which requires solving a system of "normal" equations.
Chapter 11 uses LU decomposition to compute the inverse of a matrix efficiently and reliably. A demo program tests how well you can invert the dreaded Hilbert matrices, which are notoriously difficult to invert accurately. The chapter also computes determinants and condition numbers of matrices, and it compares different algorithms for solving linear systems.
Part 4: THE JOYS OF COMPUTATION - The final part of this book covers its lighter side of numerical computation.
Chapter 12 covers Java's BigNumber and BigDecimal classes, which support "arbitrary precision" arithmetic--subject to memory constraints, you can have numbers with as many digits as you like. This chapter explores how these classes can be useful. You compute a large prime number with more than 3,000 digits, and you write functions that can compute values such as the square root of two and e^x to an arbitrary number of digits of precision.
Mathematicians over the centuries have created formulas for computing the value of pi. Enigmatic Indian mathematician Ramanujan devised several very ingenious ones in the early 20th century. An iterative algorithm supposedly can compute more than 2 billion decimal digits of pi. Chapter 13 uses the big number functions from Chapter 12 to test some of these formulas and algorithms.
Chapter 14 is about random number generation. A well-known algorithm generates uniformly distributed random values. It examine algorithms that generate random normally distributed and exponentially distributed random values. The chapter concludes with a Monte Carlo algorithm that uses random numbers to compute the value of pi.
Mathematicians have mulled over prime numbers since nearly prehistoric times. Chapter 15 explores primality testing and investigates formulas that generate prime numbers, and it looks for patterns in the distribution of prime numbers.
Chapter 16 introduces fractals, which are beautiful and intricate shapes that are recursively defined. There are various algorithms for generating different types of fractals, such as Julia sets and the Mandelbrot set. In fact, Newton's algorithm for finding roots, when applied to the complex plane, can generate a fractal.
Excellent coverage of many aspects in numerical computingReview Date: 2005-10-21
Ronald Mak has taken the trouble to explain IEEE floating point standards in a fun and easy-to-understand manner.
Another thing about this book that is worthy of a mention is its great OO programming styles. Codes are also well commented and reader friendly. Overall, it is a great source to learn not just on how to program numerical methods in Java but how to write good OO programs.
The only two bad things I could say about this book is that I should have gotten of this book much earlier and if only Amazon allows a Six Stars rating.
Educational, interesting, and funReview Date: 2003-05-25
This book is an introduction to numerical computing using Java providing "non-theoretical explanations of practical numerical algorithms." While this sounds like heady stuff, freshman level calculus should be sufficient to get the most out of this text.
The first three chapters are amazingly useful, and worth the price of admission alone. Mak does a fine job explaining in simple terms the pitfalls of even routine integer and floating-point calculations, and how to mitigate these problems. Along the way the reader learns the details of how Java represents numbers and why good math goes bad. The remainder of the book covers iterative computations, matrix operations, and several "fun" topics, including fractals and random number generation.
The author conveys his excitement for the subject in an easy-to-read, easy-to-understand manner. Examples in Java clearly demonstrate the topics covered. Some may not like that the complete source is in-line with the text, but this is subjective. Overall, I found this book educational, interesting, and quite enjoyable to read.
if (java != eCommerce) { ...Review Date: 2004-11-21
with detail and depth best left for more specialized and hard-core texts that the curious reader can explore after this one. Refreshing.

Used price: $1.31

Java Programming with Oracle SQLJ - above averageReview Date: 2004-04-10
The book explains how SQLJ relates to SQL, PL/SQL, Java, JDBC and it provides a good introduction to the JDeveloper IDE (Integrated Development Environment).
The book is written very clearly and the appearance and organization of the text is well up to the O'Reilly standard.
I
can't comment on the worked examples yet as I have not yet tried them out.
Easy readingReview Date: 2004-01-25
Outstanding bookReview Date: 2002-11-08
I liked this book because it covers SQLJ programming, as well as:
1. Oracle SQL.
2. Oracle PL/SQL.
3.
Oracle JDeveloper.
4. Developing J2EE components for the Oracle9i Application server (9iAS) such as EJB, servlets and JSP.
5.
Java stored procedures.
I liked the author's writing style: it is clear and to the point. I found it very easy to read, and was able to follow the examples in the book and apply them to my own programs.
I highly recommend this great little book!
Java Programming with Oracle SQLJReview Date: 2002-06-15
Well worth the price.Review Date: 2002-03-27
I found myself incorporating the material presented into my work before I finished reading the book.
An excellent resource.


MANY LAUGHSReview Date: 2008-11-26
Look it up.Review Date: 2008-10-15
If you are like me and enjoy Foxworthy;you'll get a real hoot out of this book.What really amazes me ,is that this gift of language of Jeffs,can actually be committed to print.Although the book is really good,and allows the reader to mull this "talk" over at ease;I still prefer the richness at the the actual live talk. When you listen to this priceless Redneck talk;these words go zinging past like stray bullets at the shooting reage.
I took notice of Brandon Simpson's review posted on July 29,2007 where this obviously sage student of language calls this sort of thing "morphophonemic alterations" .It seems Jeff overlooked this word in his Dictionary----anyone knows it's Redneck for "Mor fur dem hicks, and al' der relatshuns".
Everyone knows that English is a living language and changes with common use;and it don' git more common'r than dis!!
Funny, But Not Worth The PriceReview Date: 2007-10-16
Morphophonemic AlterationsReview Date: 2007-07-29
On the other hand, we don't need to actually know the techincal definition to enjoy them.
Brandon Simpson
Jeff Foxworthy's dictionaries never get old...Review Date: 2008-05-24
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I especially appreciated the step by step formatting.