Software Books
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Used price: $13.00

A Photoshop must haveReview Date: 2008-09-08
Outstanding Explanation and Understanding of Camera RawReview Date: 2008-07-14
Photoshop CS3 RAWReview Date: 2008-02-28
Any computer or photography library strong in Photoshop techniques will find it popular.Review Date: 2008-05-08
How do professional photographers turn RAW data into fine polished results? Photoshop CS3 RAW: Transform your RAW Images into Works of Art explains how to use the Photoshop CS2 tool, surveying the basics of optimizing RAW images and deciding when to shoot RAW, how to organize and automate their processing, how to tweak the images with professional techniques, and more. Neo-pros need this - and any computer or photography library strong in Photoshop techniques will find it popular.
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Time To Get RAWReview Date: 2008-02-20
But simply taking the picture isn't enough, as there is tons of post-processing that goes on to get images looking even better than when they were taken. If you want to learn how to edit, crop, saturate, lighten, darken, whatever your heart desires with RAW imgagery, this is a great resource to have!! With nearly 250 pages spread across 12 chapters, this is a great introduction (in full color on glossy paper) to getting the most out of your camera and taking your images from Bs to As!!
This is a great resource to digital editing, my only caveat is that I feel it could be a bit longer. Another 50 pages or so with another example per chapter could have made things even better. A small complaint (and not enough to hurt my rating for the book) but it's worth noting.
If you take RAW images and want to learn how to get more out of them, this book will get you well on your way!!
***** RECOMMENDED

Used price: $62.58

Great BookReview Date: 2008-01-23
Excellent beginners guideReview Date: 2008-01-19
It has great explanations of the lingo/structure of the financial markets as well as useful code examples.
Great .NET Book for Financial DevelopersReview Date: 2007-06-15
If you are a .NET developer in the financial industry you owe it to yourself to pick up this great resource!
***** RECOMMENDED
Excellent Capital/Money Markets (Securities) Text for .NET Developers - Strongly RecommendedReview Date: 2006-10-18
First the positives: This books succeeds enormously at providing a very good introduction to equity markets and front and back office software development from a .NET development lead, architect or developer perspective. In less than 500 pages the authors manage to provide a very good and reasonably comprehensive/broad tutorial in several aspects of financials as well as .NET and the book makes reasonably easy reading for such technical subjects. Most of the relevant and interesting topics are covered or touched on. The reviewers I mention above itemize most of the .NET and financials topics covered so I will spare you the repetition.
The authors are obviously very knowledgeable in both the securities domain and the .NET architecture and development technologies and issues and convey their knowledge expertly. This book makes an excellent introduction (but ironically advanced/intermediate in several respects) to the domain concepts and requisite architectural/developmental .NET features. Having said that let me add that you will need more than this book if you seriously plan to undertake financial software development with .NET. You may need to supplement your knowledge in both areas with some of these books, depending what you already know or have been involved in:
Securities/Electronic Payments Domain: 1. Securities Operations: A Guide to Trade and Position Management by Michael Simmons; 2. Corporate Actions by Michael Simmons; 3. After the trade is made by David M. Weiss, Revised 2006 Edition; 4. How the US Securities Market Works by Hal McIntyre (2nd Edition); 5. Gobal Securities Operations by Jeremiah O'Connor; 6. Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners by Larry Harris; 7. An Introduction to Financial Technology by Roy S. Freedman. 8. You may also need to understand Secure Electronic Payment Systems (see texts by Weidong Kou, Mostafa Hashem Sherif)
Technology (.NET Framework, Visual Studio & SQL mainly) : Books by some of the best authors such as 1. Juval Lowy and Alex Ferrara (.NET 3.5, SOA/WCF, Web Services, Remoting, Messaging, Application Logging, Threading, Component-based/Distributed Architectures, Application Security Design, etc.); 2. Chris Sells (Windows Forms in VS 2005); 3. David Sceppa, Brian Noyes, Fabrice Marguerie or David Ratz(ADO.NET 2.0/3.5/Data Binding or LINQ); 4. Stephen Walther, Alessandro Gallo, Cristian Darie, Marco Bellinaso (ASP.NET 2.0/3.5 and AJAX); 4. Nick Rozanski (Software Systems Architecture); 6. Itzik Ben Gan (MS SQL 2005-8); 7. Secure Coding against hacker attacks using books by Gary McGraw/Billy Hoffman/Michael Howard such as 'The 19 Deadly Sins Of Software Security'; to explore such topics in greater detail.
I think the author could have added the equivalent VB.NET code for VB developers and architects. That is the main beef I have (and the book is a bit too expensive, buy it online for a rebate. It should have been paper back to reduce the price for readers) but I still thinks it deserves a 5-star ranking . Bravo to Samir Jayaswal and Yogesh Shetty, the authors!
.NET ala Security TradingReview Date: 2007-01-11
Two negatives might be worth considering before spending a fair amount of money. First, not much (anything?) about building high performance applications. Lots of talk about needing performance in the securities market, little in the way of delivery. Second, the book is based on .NET 1.X "best practices". The chapter on 2.0 reads like a last minute techno-tour.


Very practical web development book (making extensive use of Zend Framework)Review Date: 2008-11-25
I see this book as a very good manual for a CS class in LAMP web development.
Todo lo que necesita un emprendedor webReview Date: 2008-10-30
Hasta el momento no tengo quejas sobre este libro, y creo que no la tendré, aunque tengo que mencionar, que deberian explicar que el libro hace uso de Zend Framework y que sin el seria dificil aplicar Web 2.0 basandonos en el libro.
CodeIgniter es mi framework para desarrollo, pero ahora que el libro me introduce hacia Zend Framework creo que tengo mas posibilidades, si eres alguien que desea aprender Zend Framework, introducirte en el mundo del web 2.0, creo que este es el libro perfecto.
OutstandingReview Date: 2008-10-04
Good book after slow startReview Date: 2008-08-15
Excellent, but why implement your own Db Table patternReview Date: 2008-09-11
The only issue I would raise is that the Author has used his own classes for database Table access instead of employing the frameworks standard Zend_Db_Table and Zend_Db_Table_Row bases. This means that anyone wanting to adhere closely to the Zend Framework (for corporate reasons) will have to reverse engineer the approaches used. An odd choice for a book almost entirely based on the Zend Framework.

Used price: $5.00

This book makes Premiere even clearer to understand.Review Date: 2006-07-21
I have enjoyed reading the book and implementing the procedures. If you want to learn Premiere Pro 1.5 from scratch on a professional level, this is your book to use to get you up to speed.
Superb TrainingReview Date: 2006-01-15
Excellent Learning ToolReview Date: 2006-03-15
Fantastic introduction to Premiere ProReview Date: 2006-01-26
The book is extremely well written and has a nice conversational tone throughout. The exercises were easy to understand, but are good building blocks for more complex projects.
I generally hate "teach yourself" books, but this one was a rare exception. I can't recommend it enough!
The ideal Self Paced Training Program for Premiere Pro 1.5Review Date: 2005-12-07
Before ordering this book I ordered "Adobe Premiere Pro 1.5 Studio Techniques" which is an excellent Reference Book, but not the most indicated book for a newbie self paced training program. If you have both books I think you will have the best of both worlds.

Used price: $0.82

EJBReview Date: 1998-11-18
Was far ahead of it's time and still usefulReview Date: 2005-09-02
This book was way ahead of it's time. I heard Bob speaking about Domino and Java at The View's advanced technical seminar in 1999. At that time many Lotus Notes developers were just coming to grips with LotusScript (although it was introduced in Lotus Notes 4) and all of the new web features associated with Domino; HTML, CSS, JavaScript etc.
While this book is now dated, it is still one of the best on programming Lotus Notes and Domino with Java, and the only one that focuses solely on that topic. Many other books have glossed over this topic altogether. Although a couple of others have provided good treatment. If you are new to Notes and Java then it could still be well worth your while to pick up a copy.
Programming Domino 4.6 With JavaReview Date: 1999-03-21
Programming Domino 4.6 With JavaReview Date: 1999-03-21
A great book for any Domino/Java programmer!Review Date: 1998-11-15
Used price: $0.80

PERFECTReview Date: 2008-03-19
ExactReview Date: 2007-06-17
testReview Date: 2007-09-22
It is excellent.
A Perfect Match!Review Date: 2007-05-12
Very compellingReview Date: 2004-06-21

Used price: $0.01

Perfect go-to for quick answersReview Date: 2007-08-14
The book is clean and concise and very logically ordered. The index in the back makes it very easy to find what you're looking for and if you can't think of the name for something you can find it easily by browsing since the book is so well organized.
Each element is plainly described and accompanied by a picture - don't let the greyscale images fool you, they get directly to the point so you can see exactly how to accomplish something.
I've seen a lot of XPress books out there, many 5-times the thickness of this book but all those other books seem to add superfluous text just to fill pages where this book gets to the point. Of all my books for design and design software, this has by far been my most helpful and most used.
Excellent!Review Date: 2001-03-05
The Quark book for the do-it-yourselferReview Date: 2002-02-15
Quark unveiledReview Date: 2001-06-08
An excellent tutor at my desk-side.Review Date: 2002-01-15
Elaine
Weinmann's very well illustrated and easy to read/follow excersises are what any student needs to reach their goal in QuarkXPress.
My copy is different in color to the one sold here, but it looks exactly like the one my professor uses.
And, because the
book is not really that thick, it can fit in either a backpack or a briefcase. The only main problem I have with the book
itself is the paper-back style. It will fray and dog-ear pretty fast, so take good care of this "Bible for Quark".
And...for
those whom are not too sure of their Keyboard shortcuts, thank God, they put them in the back of the book.
At least I don't
have to search my binder for my photocopies! That little extra is a Godsend. Especially when you are being tested on the shortcuts.
Get the book. Hope my review helped you.

Used price: $17.00

QuickBooks 2008 manualReview Date: 2008-11-24
Quickbooks the Official GuideReview Date: 2008-11-09
Quickbooks Pro 2008Review Date: 2008-10-31
Great reports, great tools. can take away from other software programs. Quickbooks have a wonderful database you can do anything with.
QuickBooks 2008 GuideReview Date: 2008-08-30
Easy to read and has lots of helpful informationReview Date: 2008-08-11

Used price: $15.99

Ruby progrmming language.Review Date: 2008-03-09
Absolutely BrilliantReview Date: 2007-11-06
Simply Excellent...Review Date: 2008-02-11
Well worth the investment!
Wonderful Ruby Learning Book!!Review Date: 2008-01-11
***** HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Tries something a bit different, is mostly successfulReview Date: 2008-01-26
This is a very nice idea, and there are some examples that are a cut above the usual fare: chapter 9 includes a Bible Code generator, and an implementation of the 'methinks it is like a weasel' sentence natural selection program from Richard Dawkins' The Blind Watchmaker. There's also mention of memoization, profiling and benchmarking, the Schwartzian transform for sorting, and even Symbol#to_proc. There's also quite a gentle introduction to Rails, which is probably sufficient for someone new to Ruby and Rails to move onto Ruby for Rails.
However, the execution isn't always perfect. Probably the biggest downside to this pedagogical approach is that there's not really one obvious place to describe how a particular feature works in depth, or the focus moves away from its practical use in a script. As a result, many of the explanations are compressed. Chapter 1 provides a 'crash' description of object orientation in 9 lines. Chapter 3 first mentions hashes, but compares them to functions, and not to arrays. Tail recursion is defined in a 4 line footnote in chapter 7. If you already understand these concepts, you'll be fine, but they won't teach you anything. If you don't, they aren't very helpful. At a couple of points the book also insists that everything in Ruby is an object, but code blocks (among other things) aren't until they're wrapped in Procs. For the more functional-esque techniques advocated in the book, this is a subtle point which could trip up a beginner.
Also, some of the examples are weak. Chapter 4 rushes through regular expressions, using them to compress whitespace, but why not also mention String#squeeze? Chapter 5 uses regexes to deal with XML and it gets the job done, but advice on using a real XML parser might have been more useful in the long term. Chapter 6 contains a truly contrived Buffy the Vampire Slayer-related example.
This isn't a bad introduction to Ruby, and it's a very admirable attempt to do something different, but I wanted to like it more than I did. If you already know some object oriented programming, this could make a good companion to a more tutorial-style book, like The Pickaxe.

Used price: $23.70

Excllent Book, However it is outdatedReview Date: 2007-12-12
Abdullah
Excellent BookReview Date: 2002-11-21
The most useful book of SAPReview Date: 1999-07-08
Top SAP book to understand processesReview Date: 2003-04-11
Although process mostly keeps the same even with R/3 upgrading, there would still have some big changes between version 3.0 which this book refers to and the version 4.X. And I really hope this book could have second edition and explore more on the MTO process instead of only 30 pages in the last chapter.
This is really the best SAP book I've read!
Want to understand SAP? Read this book!Review Date: 1999-04-28
BTW: The book has more than 840 pages, not 448 as mentioned in the book information!
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