Software Books
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greatReview Date: 2004-03-02
Brilliant beginners bookReview Date: 2005-07-06
A great reference book.
What a marvelous book!Review Date: 2001-03-15
Web page delight.Review Date: 2001-03-19
Using the color photos of screen shots in order to make the understanding better, this book is broken down into 3 parts. Part 1 is the basics, helping you crawl in web design before you run. You'll be treated to topics like the elements of the web page, adding graphics, which include types of art, colors, pixels, photos, drawings, backgrounds and bullets.
Part 2 is the creation of the web page, which deals with subjects like posting, HTML layout, using Microsoft Word and FrontPage as web editors. The ideas and techniques for both Word and FrontPage are well explained and the screen shots included make it easier to visualize what the final outcome will look like.
Part 3 is the going live phase of the design, with the uploading of pages with the FTP protocol and web page updating after you have gone live. The hands-on really starts in part 2, which may be a drawback to the book, but overall information wise this book will transform the novice designer into a serious web master in no time flat.
ComprehensiveReview Date: 2003-12-05

Used price: $0.01

A Good Start For Beginner Web Page DesignersReview Date: 2000-10-10
Easiest way to learn how to make web pages seen to dateReview Date: 2000-05-09
The style of presentation is a series of screen shots with notational marks indicating where to click. These pictures are all in full color, closely matching what you will see on the screen. All of the fundamental steps of using the wizards to create a basic page are covered. Specific topics include: adding links, modifying the colors of text and background; embedding pictures, including tables and forms; posting the page online and announcing the page to the world. Throughout this, there is the occasional tip to help the appearance of the page. Presented at the level of the novice, the only prerequisite is the basic knowledge needed to point and click.
Realistically, the day is no doubt coming when your web page will be as much of your public persona as the job you hold, the car you drive and your place of residence. If you have a desire to have a web page and have no idea where to begin, this book was written for you. It is the best introductory book to building pages that I have seen so far.
Published in Journal of Recreational Mathematics, reprinted with permission
A Fun, Easy, and Inexpensive Way to Learn!Review Date: 1999-05-24
Readers will learn a number of exciting techniques, shortcuts, and tips that will make Website creation a breeze. Readers will also learn how to add a variety of impressive features to their Websites such as sounds, pictures, animations, and other cool features! Only a modest knowledge level of HTML, the Internet, and computers is necessary to get started. Readers will have no trouble at all learning how to create Web pages and Websites.
Easy Web Pages is a wonderfully colored and illustrated book intended to be a starting point for designing Websites. As are other books in Que's popular Easy ... series, this large easy-to-read book is well suited for students of all ages from grade school through senior citizen who desire or may require an effective illustrated approach to learning. It easily rests in the open position on a table or on a lap and was written with beginners in mind.
FrontPage Express and this book does not offer all the bells and whistles that more advanced programs and books will but they do provide beginners with an inexpensive way to get started. If you would like to learn how to design and create Websites for yourself and possibly for others, this is a fun and great way to learn. Get started today!
Complete introduction on Web page for beginnersReview Date: 2000-07-01
Ned Snell Easy Web pagesReview Date: 2000-03-08

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Easy is right, even for beginnersReview Date: 1999-05-03
great visual bookReview Date: 1998-10-03
A Great Illustrated Guide To Windows 98!Review Date: 1998-10-04
Readers are walked through the basic Windows 98 functions and settings. Brief and concise instructions are provided on how to customize the desktop, setting the taskbar, adding programs to the start menu, managing files, running applications, viewing documents, installing Windows components, installing software and hardware, setting up printers, using the Internet Explorer Web browser, the Outlook Express mail program, and much more!
Easy Windows 98 is large, fully-colored, and features above average size printing that makes it easy to thumb through in a casual manner, allowing readers to move easily from one topic to the next. Readers will like the open workbook style format of the book. It can be placed on one's lap or near a computer and opened for convenient hands-off viewing. Quality color screen and menu shots show how to make the right moves and clicks necessary to make Windows 98 easier to live with.
As are other books in Que's Easy ... series, this book is well-suited for students, beginners, and even senior citizens who desire or may require an illustrated approach to learning. This book will provide many hours of exciting reading. Readers will have no trouble at all picking up the skills necessary to successfully use Windows 98. Great for classroom use and makes an excellent gift!
For Begginers it is simply the BEST...Review Date: 2000-03-19
so much easier to understand than most computer books.Review Date: 1999-02-17

Used price: $5.01

Good overview of ebXML and web servicesReview Date: 2002-10-18
good intro on B2B web servicesReview Date: 2002-10-22
Good overview of ebXML and web servicesReview Date: 2002-10-18
Get Up-To-Speed FastReview Date: 2002-07-09
Fits ebXML into the Big PictureReview Date: 2002-07-08


Some pretty good tips.Review Date: 2008-06-23
Learn something new everytime you open the booReview Date: 2008-05-23
LOVE IT!!!Review Date: 2008-03-26
You'll love itReview Date: 2008-01-06
A Book on What's New In Excel 2007Review Date: 2007-02-13
First, of coure, is if you are new to Excel. I suppose that there are some people out there who don't know Excel. If you're one of these, this is not the book for you.
Second, and I expect far more common comes in two versions. (1) you know and use Excel and are wondering if it is worth while to spend the money to pay for an upgrade, and if it is worth while to spend the time and effort to learn the new features. (2) you have the new Excel and are looking at the 'RIBBON' and wondering what to do with it.
In either of these cases this is the book for you. It's a small book on what's new in Excel 2007, it skipps all the beginning stuff like 'what is a spreadsheet.' It starts with the Ribbon. What else, that's the biggest change. And from there it goes on to the other major changes into what Microsoft did with Excel in this revision.
This little book could save you an awful lot of time and effort.

Used price: $0.50

Great Book for the Beginner!!!!Review Date: 2000-07-08
I LOVE THIS BOOK!Review Date: 1999-07-22
Great Book for the Beginner!!!!Review Date: 2000-07-08
Better than a $199 courseReview Date: 2000-03-14
My boss sent me to an Access II course. I was not sure if I may fail so I bought this book; did all the exercise and when I was in the class room, I can do things even the teacher cannot, let alone being able to understand everything that the course offered.
The book is that good. If you know nothing about Access now, but need to know, buy the book.
I LOVE THIS BOOK!Review Date: 1999-07-22

Used price: $3.11

More Than I Expected!Review Date: 2007-01-30
A New Format for Hints & TipsReview Date: 2005-03-21
The first Annoyance is "Kill Clippy." This was one of the most hated "innovations" in history. Even Microsoft eventually had the sense to turn him off in Excel 2002. But if you're running an older version, or if someone else using you're computer turns him on, here's how to get rid of him permanently. And for a joke he offers you a web site on "clippycide." That's what a computer book should be.
This goes on to nearly every aspect of working with Excel. Chapter 9 starts out:
Excel's basic functions haven't changed in years. Of course, Microsoft has to addd new stuff to give you a reason to upgrade to the latest version. In Excel 2003, that reason was support for XML."
XML is supposed to make it easy to transfer data from one program to another. Of course there are XML annoyances, one is that the XML that Access produces isn't necessarily readable by Excel. Oh Boy!
Excel AnnoyancesReview Date: 2005-05-23
This book is made for those who have had one or more vexing problems with Excel. If that's you, the answer can probably be found here and lots more besides.
Curtis Frye is an established author, including several books on Excel. He has the book divided into chapters that deal with several categories of problems: Entering Data, Formatting, Formulas, Manipulating Data, Charts, Exchanging Data, Printing, and Customization.
His solutions vary from basic training on how to use a feature, to how to tweak things "just so." Each Annoyance is the result of someone's problem with an aspect of Excel. Since many people do not upgrade to the latest version of Excel when it's available, the book covers solutions from Excel 97 through the current Excel 2003.
One of the most interesting things I learned was the existence of a function that translated numbers into Roman numerals! I never knew this existed. That's not to say I would ever have any use for such a function, but it was interesting playing around with it. If you want to try it out, type a number in one cell and in another, type this formula: = roman(cell), where "cell" is the location of the number you typed. You'll see the result in roman numbers, as advertised. Slick! Someone once threatened to file his income tax return using roman numbers, just to make things hard for IRS, and this is a way it could be done. IRS would probably object.
Screen shots are used liberally in the book. These may simply be a shot of a worksheet but often a related dialog box is also shown. Occasionally a text box includes extra information that may be of importance for a subject.
One extra feature include in the book is reference to some time-wasters, also known as games. Each is an Excel version and is free to download. There's Pac Man, Arkanoid, BlackJack, Rubik's Cube, Tetris and more.
There are occasional answers using Visual Basic, but for the most part, the answers simply use the settings that are already in Excel. Most users never tap the full potential of Excel, and I'm no exception. I feel I am an expert, but I certainly learned a lot by reading this book and you will too, if you use Excel at all.
stomp the PaperclipReview Date: 2005-01-27
Logically enough, the book starts off with those difficulties that can be met when inputting data. Many of you will applaud that the leading annoyance is the Paperclip, on which much verbal ire has no doubt been expended. So Frye forthrightly shows how to terminate this pesky little bugger.
Later sections talk about formatting, formulae, charting, printing and so on. The chapters essentially follow the main functional structures of Excel. Some features might not be obvious to you; depending on your expertise. But chances are that for the average Excel user, you'll get some good advice from Frye.
Well organized set of useful hints and pointersReview Date: 2005-01-14
The book is organized into chapters around central Excel themes; editing, formulas, formatting, charting, etc. Each chapter has a set of annoyances with a description and a solution. These annoyances are sometimes bugs, and sometimes just difficult issues that reasonably advanced users will run into where the help is either insufficient or poorly written. The fixes are generally fairly short and contained within the bounds of Excel, though the book does point to external sites and software where appropriate.
Definitely a must have for the power Excel user.

Used price: $62.99

Excel for electronic 100%Review Date: 2008-05-18
A lot of examples let easier the electronic enginner live, using Excel in the best way for it.
Excel Cookbook for Electronics EngineersReview Date: 2007-02-11
My boss sent me home early on a Friday with the instructions to take the wife out to dinner on him! Is this book worth it? What do you think?
An excellent, practical bookReview Date: 2005-04-24
The Excel spreadsheet software includes many capabilities most people do not think about when they use Excel for general business purposes. In this useful book, the author presents 16 complete examples from day-to-day electronics. Those examples include a voltage-to-current converter, a mean-time-between-failures (MTBF) calculator, a resistor color-code decoder using voice input, a voltage-regulator circuit calculator, and others. Instead of simply presenting and describing the examples, the author steps readers through the creation of the needed spreadsheets, formulas, graphs, formats, and other portions of the project.
The examples are not static. In the MTBF example, you will have an opportunity to create "scenarios" that let you try combinations of variables to determine what happens under "what if" conditions. The book comes with a CD-ROM that contains all the examples as well as an eBook version of the book. As you learn by doing, you'll gain experience using Excel so you can better apply it to your own engineering problems.
(Disclosure: I write for several magazines owned by Reed Elsevier, the parent company of the Newnes series of books. I do not work with the book-publishing group, however.)
Its Handy...Review Date: 2005-03-24
Practical and Useful to Electronic Engineers Review Date: 2005-03-24


the home garden handbooksReview Date: 2000-03-03
Best book for experienced Excel users ever.Review Date: 2006-02-18
If there is one book about Excel that I recommend reading cover to cover, this is it. Even though it covers Excel 95, it is now, 10 years later, still actual.
Very good for those who want to know Excel moreReview Date: 1999-05-21
Excel Expert Solutions for the real expertReview Date: 1999-01-04
No finer book for the finer points of ExcelReview Date: 2000-03-23

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comprehensive and conciseReview Date: 2005-01-31
The strongest argument for this book is that it appears to combine a comprehensive description of Excel with a conciseness of that explanation. In other words, it really doesn't belong in the Missing Manual series, but rather in O'Reilly's regular and long running series of texts, that share these properties. You know, the books with the purple covers.
Granted, the book is bulky. But that reflects over a decade of Excel being continually refined and added to. The conciseness of the explanations means typically some prior exposure to spreadsheets in general, and Excel in particular, would greatly aid your understanding.
Ideal Excel walkthroughReview Date: 2005-01-14
The writing is excellent and the use of screenshots is effective and not overwhelming as with other books. A superb walkthrough of the fundamentals of Excel.
From a basic start to as far as you want to goReview Date: 2005-03-10
The next thing I look for is XML. This is really the big thing that makes Excel 2003 a new edition of Excel. Sure enough, a chapter on XML as well. (Except for this section and a few very minor points, you can use the manual for earlier versions of Excel.)
But suppose you are not up to guru level and wanting to know about pivot tables and XML. Well, the book starts off with Creating a Basic Worksheet and goes on from there.
In summary, here is everything you need to know about Excel from the very basic steps to just as far as you want to go.
Ski/Snowboard Like a Pro... Use Excel Like a ProReview Date: 2006-03-21
Excel- The Missing Manual is excellentReview Date: 2005-07-08
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