Software Books
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Modern day romance-struggles with career vs. romanceReview Date: 1999-08-01
His Brother's Child is a Heartwarming romance. . .Review Date: 1999-07-29
HIS BROTHER'S CHILD is a true love story.Review Date: 1999-06-12
His Brother's Child is an enjoyable emotional story. . .Review Date: 1999-05-21
a warm and romantic book to curl up withReview Date: 1999-05-18

Used price: $1.95

Just in time...Review Date: 2004-10-28
Now I know how to work the camera, but I still take $#!++% photos!
finally, a good guide to digicamsReview Date: 2004-10-25
Technology Doesn't Have to Be IntimidatingReview Date: 2004-10-17
This Cell Phone Camera "Dummy" Loved The Book!Review Date: 2004-10-18
Phone help that gets me off the phone.....Review Date: 2004-10-25
Clear direction, illustrations and well written instruction mean that even my mom can master her phone. Of course now I spend even more time downloading the pictures of my neices and nephews she captures on her phone, but it is time well spent! And seeing the results my mom is getting....well, a picture phone might be in my future as well.

Used price: $21.75

Perfect for Web DevelopersReview Date: 2008-11-21
A Great BookReview Date: 2008-09-24
html, xhtml and css all in one desk reference for dummiesReview Date: 2008-07-28
A Great book! It answers all of my questions relating to all of the several web page languages that I have only partially understood. I now have a solid foundation for going onto more complex programming material and for developing great web applications. The recommendations for free software are terrific. Free works for me. I now have all of the tools I need on my lap top,including my own Apache server running MYSQL. Thank you Andy and Chris.
AWESOMEReview Date: 2008-11-20
Great for beginners!!Review Date: 2008-06-19
This book covers everything from basic html to css to MySQL and PHP. There is really no other book you could get that will help you build a more complete website at this level.
I'd recommend this book to anyone wanting to start their own web pages.


great referenceReview Date: 2004-08-12
good introduction to HTTP and webserver techReview Date: 2002-10-20
I am able to finish 2/3 of this book in 3 days. it's so interesting and keeps me reading on.
This is definitely a book to get you start with all kind of term for HTTP and a grasp for HTTP/Webserver concept.
for ppl with solid backgroud on HTTP, i would recommend the "HTTP: The Definitive Guide".
Don't miss itReview Date: 2002-04-24
If you really want to understand web traffic....Review Date: 2003-09-26
Clear and Readable from Start to FinishReview Date: 2004-02-14

Used price: $8.33

Adobe Illustrator 10Review Date: 2008-01-18
The Only Illustrator Book Worth OwningReview Date: 2003-03-08
Kurth has actually documented EVERY LAST feature in the program, down to the tiniest checkmark in each dialog box. He understands how I need to use the software, and offers the most specific and helpful advice I've ever seen.
A perfect example: a designer in my company needed to convert all the shapes of an expanded gradient from CMYK values to a single spot ink. If you think you know the answer, guess again -- it's not as easy as it sounds, and I've used Illustrator professionally for 8 years. The Shop Manual gave me an answer in less than five minutes.
And that's the key -- notice how I said "it gave me the answer," and not "I found the answer." No book could ever predict the above scenario and give clear-cut steps to the reader -- and that's why the others fail. Because it covers so much so well, the Shop Manual actually LEADS you to the connections you need, using Kurth's experience and a surprisingly intelligent layout.
I bought two copies: one for work, and one for home.
Very goodReview Date: 2003-02-12
Good Illustrator bookReview Date: 2002-11-08
essential pro referenceReview Date: 2002-09-18
This is a complete reference manual to the whole package, forgotten how to do something it will be in here somewhere. There is also a useful how-to section at the back covering common techniques.
These books make a designers life soo much easier.

Used price: $4.05

Great book. But you may need something newer.Review Date: 2008-09-04
I felt I was reading a rather old book. It'd better talk about new J2EE technologies. Great book anyway.
Reference book of highest quality(for J2EE implementations)Review Date: 2005-02-18
This book is well structured into different aspects of J2EE(example: servlets, JSPs, webservices, EJBs etc). Each of the sections are given detailed coverage with regards to design and architectural decisions that can go wrong.
This is not a start to end read. This book is better usable as a reference while we execute or plan during technical development cycle.
For each anti-pattern, a detailed background, symptoms, refactorings and example are provided. At the end of the book we are provided a Anti-pattern and Refactorings catalog.
The book also covers capacity planning type of antipatterns at the beginning. This will help give broader perspective about making design and possible implementation decisions on a enterprise scale.
A must read for enthusiastic J2EE practitioners who strive for quality output.
Gotcha's exposed.... (A Review of one good book)Review Date: 2003-12-24
In this book the Antipatterns (APs) are grouped by J2EE topical area, several are identified for the area and then solutions proposed for each AP. Not only do they expose issues with designs that are common mistakes, but they then go on to not only tell you a possible solution(s) and also impart good principles on why.
Each AP has the following sections: Background, General Form, Symptoms and Consequences, Typical Causes, Known Exceptions, Refactorings, Varations, Example(s) and Related Solutions. The catalog of AP's in the appendix of the book provide a quick summary of each AP also, so you can see if your Symptoms are listed quickly.
One example is from the "Distribution and Scaling" chapter. The just of it is that in an enterprise system you use layering, workflow and the idea that the network is the computer to model and solve your problems. If you haven't you'll notice all of your code linking into libraries of many different types when library access should be localized to one workflow point that other workflow tasks utilize. By doing what they suggest you'll end up with a highly distributable solution and a weakly coupled system that will be flexible to change.
So save yourself some future troubles, or help yourself fix your current ones, read this book! It imparts knowledge you can't get from a Blueprint!!
Excellent for J2EE Designers/DevelopersReview Date: 2003-12-20
The book covers most of the J2EE spectrum. There are sections on JSPs, Servlets, Entity and Session Beans, JMS, and Web Services. There are also sections on general J2EE architecture including distribution, scaling, and persistence. Each chapter gives a background on a specific antipattern, discusses the typical symptoms of the antipattern, and then covers various refactorings that can be used to correct the antipattern. Some of the antipatterns discussed may sound familiar ("too much code in JSPs") but the list of refactorings will provide useful information for even these obvious coding errors if you happen to be supporting an application that suffers from that antipattern.
The authors have done a great job of clearly explaining each antipattern, both explaining why it is an antipattern and what you can do to fix the problem. Each refactoring is demonstrated with code samples as well as with UML diagrams where appropriate. Overall, this is an excellent book that should be on the shelf of anyone involved in designing J2EE applications.
A Good Read for Project Mangers, tooReview Date: 2004-01-30
"J2EE AntiPatterns" is a useful guide for helping project managers with technical (but not necessarily J2EE) backgrounds zero-in on the major pitfalls the development team must circumvent. The Background, General Form, Symptoms and Consequences, and Typical Causes sections of most AntiPatterns provide the manager with sufficient information to recognize, understand, and (hopefully) avoid technical problems. (The exceptions are the AntiPatterns for entity, session and message-driven beans - the book assumes a basic understanding of J2EE beans.) Project managers do not need to fully comprehend the code examples (the book has many) to employ the lessons described in "J2EE AntiPatterns" - simply recognizing and understanding the AntiPatterns will be valuable to the team.
If I had read this book before (or during) my last project, I would have been able to recognize some significant problems by simply observing and listening to the engineers discuss their challenges, including the following AntiPatterns:
"Too Much Code" - our LOC
metrics would have fleshed this one out quickly;
"Using Strings for Content Generation" - we spent many hours debugging
HTML that rendered properly in IE but not Mozilla;
"When In Doubt Make it a Web Service" - it can be expensive mistake
to implement something purely for technology's sake.
Coupled with a book or two describing J2EE at a high level, "J2EE AntiPatterns" is essential reading for technical project managers. This book will undoubtedly increase the project manager's effectiveness and help him/her better communicate with the team. A little knowledge for project managers is NOT always dangerous!

Used price: $7.00

Linux Server Hacks, Volume Two: Tips & Tools for Connecting, Monitoring, and Troubleshooting (Hacks)Review Date: 2008-03-03
More specialized than Volume 1Review Date: 2007-07-08
If you don't have the first volume, you might want to start with it. It has some simple but very useful things that apply to just about anyone with their own Linux box and a command line.
This volume is much more advanced, and most of the tricks and techniques deal with much more specialized problem domains, ie. things you might not have run into yet. One advantage of this book over the first is that it is very up to date in its recommendations of existing software to use.
Oustanding Linux Companion GuideReview Date: 2006-06-06
Chapters Covered:
01. Linux Authentication
02. Remote GUI Connectivity
03. System Services
04. Cool Sysadmin Tools and Tips
05. Storage Management and Backups
06. Standardizing, Sharing, and Synchronizing Resources
07. Security
08. Troubleshooting and Performance
09. Logfiles and Monitoring
10. System Rescue, Recovery, and Repair
Pick this book up now, you will NOT be disappointed in this delcious Linux FEAST!!
***** HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
This book totally rocks!Review Date: 2006-11-18
Just the section on LVM (Logical Volume Management) have saved my bacon!
Every single "hack" (read tip) is extremely practical, applicable and relevant to managing and administering Linux systems whether "servers" or not!
The absolute best part of this book is that you get really useful, insightful views into the experiences of seasoned veterans of Unix systems. If you sit in a NOC or if you're the 24x7 guy/gal on a server farm, this book is an occupational requirement! Everyone else will appreciate it if they're running Linux. In my modest network of perhaps 30 Linux systems, I can tell you that I saved hours of effort with just two of the hacks included in this volume. Considering the time savings, buying this book saved my company more than 300% on the cover price.
VERY VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!Review Date: 2006-09-12
Von Hagen and Jones, begin by exploring the authentication options that are available to you in heterogeneous networked computing environments and simplify administering user accounts and passwords. Then, the authors explore ways of connecting to remote systems. Next, the authors explain how to set up central servers that do things like synchronize the time on all the systems in your environment, deliver IP addresses to newly connected hosts, and integrate these services with existing ones. The authors then present a variety of cool sysadmin tips and techniques that they've accumulated over the years, including how to keep processes running without writing a daemon or staying logged in, how to use PXE to netboot Linux, how to share information with fellow sysadmins in a centralized fashion, how to get the most out of classic but incredibly useful terminal-oriented applications, and so on. They continue to explore some cool ways of making it easier for you to manage storage, deploy new systems, do backups of today's huge disks, and even reduce the need for some of the restore requests that occasionally clog every sysadmin's inbox. Then, the authors provide some tips and tricks for managing distributed storage and making sure the administrative environments on your servers are synchronized. They then discuss a wide range of security tools and techniques that can help you sleep at night and protect your systems at the same time. Next, they provide techniques for optimizing system performance, whether by figuring out who's hogging the entire CPU and shooting down that user's network sessions or by using cool knobs in the /proc filesystem to tweak system performance or using journaling filesystems to minimize system restart time. Then, they include hacks that enable you to centralize log information in a variety of ways, be warned when problems arise, and get the most out of system status information, whether it's log information, internal disk controller status data, or remote hardware status information that you can collect via SNMP. Finally, the authors show you how to boot crippled systems so that you can diagnose problems, repair munged filesystems, and even recover deleted files of data that was stored on disks that have gone belly up.
This most excellent book has presented hacks that are techniques that the authors have used at various times. More importantly, they view these techniques as time- and hassle-savers that are usually downright fun and cool.

Used price: $22.00

Excellent explained and a broad scope of topicsReview Date: 2002-10-18
I thought Coldfusion was rather difficult to learn, because the tips of the week by Macromedia were a little to quick for me. But Jeffrey Bardzell proved it is easy. In a straight-forward way you are taken by the hand to take all the basic steps for building a data-driven website.
Professor Says, "A+"Review Date: 2003-08-31
Working my way through a copy of Macromedia MX eLearning is changing all that. Wow! The book teaches how to develop interactions in Dreamweaver and Flash as well as offering several chapters on putting ColdFusion to work in eLearning. Each chapter includes a fine combination of hands-on work and explanation for why we are being asked to do what we're doing, especially at those places where some task is counter-intuitive. The book is also free of mistakes, typos and muddled language, a welcome plus when so many computer books seem to have been rushed to press without having been edited or proofed.
Bardzell's book is giving me two things: (1) hands on work with the software that introduces and reinforces learning without devolving into busywork and (2) a model for developing materials (like the book itself) that teach effectively from a distance. A+
Easy to follow - excellent examplesReview Date: 2004-09-03
Best Technical Book!Review Date: 2003-06-11
Intelligent and Easy to UnderstandReview Date: 2003-04-18

Used price: $3.00
Collectible price: $17.00

Page after page of drawing fun!Review Date: 2000-04-10
A great beginning for any ageReview Date: 2005-07-20
After working with this book, even you can draw!Review Date: 2000-02-12
Excellent drawing tutorial for kids and for kids-at-heartReview Date: 2002-12-20
I can now draw simple everyday objects both as cartoons and as realistically as I can. They're not professional quality yet, the book recommends daily practice until they are and that's exactly what I'm doing.
This isn't the only book you should buy though if you want to draw artistically. In my case, I'd like to draw comics-style characters and objects so I can move on to animating them later. I got Tom Alvarez's "How to Create Action, Fantasy and Adventure Comics" (separately reviewed) which is also an excellent how-to book.
Want to learn to draw .....start hereReview Date: 2000-11-15

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $19.99

200 Proof, Pure Grain NT WorkstationReview Date: 1999-02-23
!!Mucho Grande!!Review Date: 1999-04-17
To the point!Review Date: 1999-03-19
I found the book to be easy to read, easy to understand, and all that it was advertised to be, and then some.
Turned a wannabe into an MCPReview Date: 1999-02-18
I knew some about the OS, but not much. I also knew that someone would have to become an MCP in order to convince corporate that IT knew what is was doing and to leave us alone. In order to accomplish those goals, I needed a quick solution, and the Fast Track seemed like it.
To make a long story short, I learned more about the OS from this book that I ever imagined, and passed the new adaptive exam (much less questions) with flying colors.
A winner and then someReview Date: 1999-11-22
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