Programming Books


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Programming Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Programming
Audio Postproduction for Digital Video
Published in Paperback by CMP Books (2002-11)
Author: Jay Rose
List price: $46.95
New price: $41.99
Used price: $19.12

Average review score:

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-11
I was impressed from the beginning with the content of this book. It has been a great help in my recent graduate projects. This is one I will keep on the shelf for reference.

If you have only one audio produciton book in your library...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-03
This book is simply the best book on post-production audio out there. I have over a decade of experience mixing live sound and some formal training in post production, but Rose gets to the real nuts and bolts of the day-to-day sweetening of sound that I was able to apply his ideas the same day I read a chapter on EQ. I have read so many books on sound where authors get into all the details, but fail to give hands on practical advice. Rose has two unique things going for him in this book: the included CD that gives A/B comparisons of various audio sweetening and processing techniques and the cookbook format at the end of each chapter. Try any one of these "recipes" and you will instantly get results and be able to solve various problems and massively improve your soundtrack.
He gets technical in spots going into the physics of sound, studio design, and other minutia but the non-geeks you can usually skip these sections and side-bars. For those who just want to fix things they can jump to the end of each chapter and use the cookbook/troubleshooting sections. I can't recommend this book enough. If you are serious about filmmaking, you can't be without this book.

Bigger and Better than it Seems
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-23
Audio Postproduction for Digital Video
By Jay Rose
Review by Pi Ware

Don't listen to the title. It's bigger than the title. The "Digital Video" part of Audio Postproduction for Digital Video restricts the scope of this classic Jay Rose text. Rose's book goes far beyond DV, in fact, it starts with an explanation of what sound is on the molecular level and then takes you not just through audio postproduction for TV, but to techniques specific to movie production, techniques that are entirely independent of the format you originate on. Audio Postproduction for Digital Video is top-notch. It's an excellent, text-book quality manual, a soup-to-nuts guide on how to deal with sound in postproduction.

Jay Rose never gives you solutions that are applicable only to specific Digital Audio Workstations, he arms you with knowledge you can use in any platform or program. The book is an education in sound and, together with the numerous photos and diagrams (and Rose's good sense of humor), it's a liberation from the dry prose of most manuals on postproduction.

Rose teaches you from the ground up what sound is, what good sound is, and how to make bad sound better. He doesn't just stop at good writing, however, he illustrates important points with an audio CD included in the back of the book. Together with the CD, the text guides you through importing audio into the computer, editing dialogue, Do It Yourself Foley and ADR, working with filters, noise reduction techniques, pitch and time changes, the sound mix, and even, if you're so inclined, designing, constructing and wiring your own postproduction audio facility.

Though postproduction changes with every new advance in technology, Audio Postproduction for Digital Video stays current by focusing on strategy, not software. Rose avoids giving specific keystroke instructions in specific programs, but instead explains common solutions to common problems using common tools. As he says in his introduction, "You should be able to use these pages for a long time."

Anyone considering directing a short or feature, anyone who wants to be even nominally involved in the sound design of their film, and, of course, anyone interested in working in audio postproduction, would do extremely well to pick up a copy of this classic Jay Rose text.

Treasure Chest of Information in an Easy read format!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-09
This book in fantastic. The author's voice and style make this not only easy to read but a joy to read as well. There are little tips and tidbits in each chapter that will make a good audio guy great and a great audio guy better. I recommend this book to anyone in the audio post world.

Very good book from a helpful intelligent person
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-08
I decided to buy this book because I had used the forum on the DV.com website for information before, and Jay Rose's comments there had proven to be spot-on and well-informed.
This book contains a thorough examination of all the factors which contribute to the quality of post-production audio. The level of information includes the spectrum from basic to advanced, but through Mr. Rose's clear explanations the advanced information should not go over the heads of the reader.

Programming
Authentication: From Passwords to Public Keys
Published in Paperback by Addison-Wesley Professional (2001-10-11)
Author: Richard E. Smith
List price: $54.99
New price: $33.86
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Average review score:

Amazing compilation of the Authentication Methods!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-28
It's a must for anyone who needs to have a deep and clear understanding of the world of the authentication.

I'm a research assistant, having finished my Master of Sciences in Electronic Commerce (2003) in the Department of Computer Science and Operations Research at Université de Montréal (Montreal (QC) Canada) and who has written a master's thesis called "ASEMC-Authentication for a SEcure M-Commerce". The book has brought me great contributions in a very clear language even if it is a technical matter. It makes extensive use of pictures, schemas, and graphs that allow us easily understand the authentication methods. Actually, it makes use of the visual intelligence of each one of us!

Really, really good book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-31
Smith does a great job of writing about authentication while being vendor agnostic.

The book provides everything you need to know about PKI and other crucial security topics.

Everything you need to know about authentication
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-17
Authentication is one of the 4 pillars of information security(authorization, confidentiality and integrity being the other three); but very little has directly been written directly on the topic outside of the academic community; until this book.

Authentication: From Passwords to Public Keys is an excellent work that covers all of the direct areas of authentication. Authentication is a huge challenge in that most users would prefer to have their passwords short and easy to remember, which is exactly what a password should not be.

Even if there were a lot of other books available on the subject, Authentication: From Passwords to Public Keys still would be required reading.

Masterful writing and in-depth treatment of the subject
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-16
I'm in complete agreement with the previous reviewers that this book is easy to read and that it clearly explains complex material.

What I like is the way the author integrates theory, application and the human side of authentication. For example, he makes excellent use of tables to distill and display information, such as summary tables for attacks and defenses that are cross-referenced to each other. This is particularly useful to anyone who is developing security profiles, and the thorough and meticulous way that the author summarizes the information reduces the attack-defense pairings to the essentials.

His clear explanations of authentication methods and their underlying technologies, as well as how they evolved, are among the clearest in print. More importantly, he goes beyond explaining the mathematics behind the protocols by also showing how assumptions can lead to exposures. An example is the 4-digit lock, which has 10,000 possible combinations. At first glance it would seem that you have a 1-in-10000 chance of guessing the combination. However, he goes on to explain that a study showed 50% of people chose a calendar date for the combination, then leads you through the math of showing why you have approximately 1-in-512 chance of breaking the combination on the first try. He uses similar techniques throughout the book, which makes you think in real-world terms. It's his treatment of the people side of the authentication techniques that add to the real-world approach.

I also thought that the chapter on picking PINs and passwords was exceptional. I've written password management policies and procedures for a number of clients in recent years and thought I was an expert. After reading this 37-page chapter I discovered what I didn't know - and it was a lot!

Each chapter is filled with facts that you may have or have not considered, and each is filled with common sense, backed up with the math or technical underpinnings. Moreover, the book complete covers authentication and will get anyone quickly up-to-speed on the basics and many of the finer points. This book is especially important as a resource to anyone who is involved in health care because the material is directly applicable to requirements set forth in HIPAA. It is also essential reading for anyone who develops or manages security in a web- or e-commerce environment because of the dependencies upon the technologies and methods that are discussed in this book. IT security specialists will also find this book to be an invaluable resource, especially the parts that cover password management, social engineering and practical applications of authentication.

An exciting book on authentication, of all things? It is!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-08
An exciting book on authentication, of all things? Is such a thing even possible? Yes, Richard E. Smith proves it by publishing Authentication - a comprehensive guide to all things that authenticate or are authenticated. The book will educate you on more aspects of authentication than you ever wanted to know, but most likely you will enjoy it. As a security professional, I found the author's writing style to be excellent and even entertaining, a clear sign of writing by a true expert on the subject.

Every obscure form of authentication protocol (have you heard of X9.17 lately?) finds its place in a book. Passwords, tokens, biometrics, various authentication protocols are all described and analyzed in great detail, in plain English and with multiple diagrams. Another valuable feature is that for every authentication protocol, the relevant attacks and defenses are outlined in every chapter summary. The attacks which are not covered by existing defenses ("residual attacks") are emphasized at the end as something to watch for. For example, a 'trojan horse' attack to steal authentication credentials is one of them - apparently there is no 100 percent reliable way to stop it.

A chapter on passwords contains several creative ideas to make this ubiquitous form of authentication more effective, simultaneously more secure and more usable. It also answers some interesting password questions. When does it make no sense to enforce a complex non-dictionary password? How random is a random password from a dictionary? Why is a bank PIN of four digits secure enough for the job? When it is better to write a password down? Read the book and you will discover the answers! The book also explains public key crypto systems and their use for authentication (such as PKI).

People issues of security also receive well-deserved coverage in a separate chapter. Various kinds of secrets used for people as passwords are outlined. An interesting discussion on choosing an initial password when providing system access reveals important aspects of this process that few people think about.

For more technically inclined readers, straightforward analysis of complexities of Windows authentication (LANMAN, NTLM, Kerberos) and attacks against it is provided in a "Challenge Response Passwords" chapter. Computer scientists will find some insights on authentication algorithm design patterns. For less technical readers, understanding authentication based on Ali Baba and a cave of treasures will help to sort through the authentication system requirements and peculiarities. Overall, the book (while being targeted at security professionals) contains something for almost everyone interested in how computers tell that whoever is sitting at the console is who she says she is.

Anton Chuvakin, Ph.D. is a senior security analyst with a major security company.

Programming
Automated Defect Prevention: Best Practices in Software Management
Published in Hardcover by Wiley-IEEE Computer Society Pr (2007-09-17)
Authors: Dorota Huizinga and Adam Kolawa
List price: $95.50
New price: $65.61
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Average review score:

Must Read for Software Development Leaders
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-30
I've read this book from cover to cover. I've read many books on software development, software processes, best practices, qualitative approaches, and quantitative approaches, many from SEI. This book has to be one of the top two. For software professionals in leadership positions facing today's pressures of delivering quality software that meets customer expectations according to plan, this book is a must-read. You will be able to implement techniques directly into your organizational processes and deliverables with considerable ease. Kolawa and Huizinga have forged a grimoire that should be on every software leaders' desk, be they Project Managers, Software Architects, PMO Directors, of Vice Presidents of Development. Here are the key take-aways from this book:

1. Clarity: All concepts, practices, and examples were extraordinarily clear. There was never a question as to what was meant, or confusion in the information conveyed.

2. Readability: The text is very user-friendly. Coming from a very technical background, I tend to read challenging and complicated material. In this book, you were able to frame both technical and complex material in a readable way. In other words, I never had to re-read anything in the book. All of the material was very easy to understand. I feel the ability to effectively reduce complexity to simplicity is the hallmark of good authorship.

3. Implementable: I found the practice-side of the book to be what I call `out-of-the-box.' This means I was able to take material directly from the text and apply that into my process(es) or deliverables with very little work or trouble. (I actually did this multiple times.) This is a testament to the subtitle of the book, Best Practices in Software Management.

4. Usefulness: The book is actually aimed at being useful within for-profit businesses. Theoretical books are good for concepts, but it's up to the readers to find ways to translate the theory into executable practices (which often is beyond the role and responsibility of the readers). Your book actually bridges this gap, and provides mechanisms to help readers implement valuable techniques into their organizations, independent of their infrastructure.

These four points make a huge difference for readers looking to improve their software development processes to ensure profitability, cost savings, and customer satisfaction. Producing quality software while building defect prevention into your processes is key in today's competitive software marketplace. With these techniques, your organization will continue to become better, managing, reducing, and even eliminating the traditional sources of defects in software deliverables. You won't be disappointed in buying this book, as you'll refer to over and over again as you build process improvement into your organization.

A practical handbook to working smarter, not harder
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
What sets this book apart from other software quality management books is its focus on real-world solutions. Many quality improvement strategies sound great on paper, but are impractical to implement because they end up slowing project progress and stirring resentment throughout the ranks. Rather than ignore the demands of modern day development, this book embraces them. The result is a refreshingly realistic approach to boosting software quality... while at the same time actually improving team productivity and developer satisfaction.

Effective guide for increasing business productivity and professional satisfaction
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
This book offers a straight-forward, realistic approach to solving challenges of day-to-day projects that the software industry faces. Not only does it address the necessity of technology businesses to increase efficiency and productivity, but it also takes into account the psychological need for individual software professionals to be challenged and intellectually fulfilled on a daily basis. The powerful gains of software automation are amplified by the strategic best practices described in this software management book.

This offers a key to a missing link for software quality
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-22
Automated Defect Prevention delivers a realistic approach to the nagging software quality problem. If you are responsible for developers who deliver business applications, you need to read this book. If you are an software architect or engineer, the book will offer a pragmatic road map to achieve incremental productivity gains within your software development lifecycle.

When I read this book I had a huge realization. Most of the quality initiatives that I had been involved with or observed had introduced (or layered on) additional tasks and responsibilities for either the architect, developer or QA engineer. Over time, these layered tasks ultimately resulted in dragging down productivity. Investing in the *correct* infrastructure to automate the monotonous/repetitive is the key to success. Quality should be the outcome of intelligent investment in productivity.



Definitely worth having on your desk
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-21
One issue I have with the software industry is that too many project managers, or stake holders managing software people, lack the understanding of just how important software quality is and how it can benefit the software teams and products. As the people most accountable for what happens with a software initiative, managers should have a solid understanding of what options are available to improve developer skills and the software they release. This book provides that needed information and helps explain who is responsible for what tasks, when they should be considering phasing in a particular practice and the benefits of a given item.

I like the way the information is presented in this book because I feel a project manager would be able to quickly evaluate a practice for phasing in without facing an all-or-nothing approach that some other books take. If, for example, a manager felt that they enjoyed the chapter on testing models, this book provides the information on what is needed, the benefits and the roles people need to take to phase that approach into their teams.

I enjoyed this book and I wish that more development teams used many of the practices in this book. While there were samples at the end of the chapters and a chapter on case studies, I would have liked to have seen a bit more information on difficulty and time constraints presented within some of the sections themselves. Overall this is a great book and definitely worth having on your desk.

Programming
Beginning Dynamic Websites with ASP.NET Web Matrix
Published in Paperback by Wrox Press (2003-01)
Authors: David Sussman, Colt Kwong, and John West
List price: $39.99
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Average review score:

The best book I found to start ASP .NET
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-21
You will be amazed when you read it. It is a step by step guide. I highly recommend this book for ASP .NET so far.

Absolutely great book for beginners (static to dynamic web)
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-26
I am a college student having some programming knowledge but totally new in dynamic/ data-driven web creation. I found this book really helpful to get started from static to exciting data-driven stuff with ASP and MSDE. Although WebMatrix has a limitation(which was developed by a team of people from Microsoft at their spare time), it's a real great tool for beginner to get to know how to install database engine, create a data table, link to your web form with drag-n-drop and some hands-on coding (provided in the book). If you need to go on to industrial level, this book or WebMartix won't help.
Chap 1 starts with step by step instructions on how to install .NET framwork, MSDE (you need this if you don't have SQL running), then WebMartix (which has its own web server, you don't need IIS to run samples from the book). One of the great styles of this book is easy-to-follow-and-understand examples which has "Try It Out" & "How it Works" section which explains the code line by line in detail. I found Chap16 and 17 really helpful for general knowledge on "Web Services" and "Beyond WebMatrix," but make sure you finish this book first, then go on to more exciting Visual Studio .NET (which is a "bigbrother" of WebMatrix)
Oh..2 case studies at the back of the book, which explains step by step how to make a guestbook, reconizing customer and "log-on" stuff..and the CD includes some software WebMatrix, MSDE, etc..
Thanks to David Sussman and Wrox P2P

The best reference for ASP.Net Beginners
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-03
Great combination and perfect fit of beginning book and tool: ASP.Net Web Matrix. Excellent examples and basic ASP.Net concepts explanation.

A Thorough Introduction to Interactive Websites
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-22
I am new to programming.

This book starts at the beginning: building a graphical web page in Web Matrix. Following a entertaining blend of practical, funny and insightful steps, in a short period I was using Visual Basic.Net and databases to add dynamic features, controls and web services.

I was amazed at how easy it is to do. This book provides an enjoyable was to grasp a firm foundation in ASP.NET programming.

Not bad, good examples
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-13
This book is a not bad introduction to ASP.NET. The reason I purchased it is I really needed to master Web Matrix ASAP and Mr. Sussman's book was quite helpful in accomplishing that goal. Of course, it is better to begin with Visual Studio since Web Matrix is somewhat limited resemblance of Visual Studuo but Web Matrix has something nobody could resist - it is free.
Make sure you learn as profoundly as possible chapters about datagrids and reusable content; these two are absolutely irreplaceble components of practically any online database application. Also pay attention to inclusion of namespaces at the very top of your code, it is forgetable. The only thing which was not working for me is Web Services. Other code samples work fine.
I would recommend to start with this book to anybody who needs to master ASP.NET.

Programming
Beginning Objects With Visual Basic 5
Published in Paperback by Wrox Press (1998-04)
Author: Peter Wright
List price: $34.99
New price: $2.99
Used price: $0.46

Average review score:

Peter Wright does it again...This time with Objects
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-18
Beginning Visual Basic 5.0 by Peter Wright was the first book on Visual Basic that I read. Peter Wright's easy to follow style and use of understandable real world examples made my transition from ACCESS database development to Visual Basic development a breeze. Recently I began to explore the world of Objects. I found that most of the texts used abstract, hard to follow language. Once again Peter Wright has produced a book that offers great coverage of the basics of his topic. Since reading this book, I have been able to go back to the other more advanced texts with no trouble. Well done Mr. Wright.

Don't buy this book if you really want to learn code
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-23
The actual information and teaching in this book could have been easily compressed into 200 pages. The other 449 pages are mostly comprised of Peter Wright boasting about how wonderful and robust a language vb5 is, and constantly making snide comments about how difficult, slow, and inadequate, C/C++ are. I found that insulting to my intelligence. Someone trying to learn Visual Basic does not need to be told that C/C++ are horrible languages. If they ever want to move beyond writing slow and inefficient VB database programs, they're going to need to learn C or C++ sooner or later. Nothing against Visual Basic, it's a great language for what it's meant to do. But I (and nobody else) needs to be told that it's the end all be all wonderful super language when it really isn't..

Aside from that I found that the book goes through creating interfaces fairly well, and actually discusses program structure and bites into code efficiency a bit. The main thing it doesn't do is tea! ch you how to write code, which is absolutely essential unless you're designing a database in Access, and even then you really should know how to code if you want to make anything good. I would steer clear of this book unless you want to pay $25 for a migraine headache.

Definitely Helpfull
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-16
I bought this book because I knew nothing of OOP or Active X components and was faced with the task of being responsible for enhancing an application written using those techniques. Furthermore, the developer that wrote the application was long gone and there was very little documentation. After reading the book and coding some of the examples I was able to figure out the application and how to effectively change it. Not only did this book help me to do my current job, but learning the OOP techniques has made me a better programmer. Needless to say, the skills I have learned from this $40 investment will benefit me in future earnings far and above. I also appreciated Peter Wrights "this is no big deal" humor throughout.

I found it quite easy the way it's laid out.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-18
Being an experienced VB programmer, I like the way Peter laid out the way he explained it all. Before reading this book, I really didn't have much understanding of objects/classes....just that they were there and it had some code I could use elsewhere in my project. When I actually had a chance to work on it, I just felt so knowledgeable!!

One thing I thought was interesting.....most of the time when there is source code with the book, the examples are fully coded and functional. He tricked me this time and had a project with many classes and no code. (BTW, I downloaded it from the Wrox site). He leaves this open for you to work on it and get it right. I think that's the best way to learn.

Good Job Peter!!!

Peter does Databases and VB OO programming
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-08
He non-chalantly covers what has been a very stick y subject.

His style is friendly ... a little wordy.

But when he puts nuts and bolts together .. the guy has quite a philosophy ...

I've been a VB programmer since v3. VB3 and VB4 didn't do objects .. so I went to Java.

Even though I am familiar with OO programming ... he was NOT boring ... and spelled things out simple stupid 123.

If you are Einstein or Forest Gump .. .you will get something out of this book .. if you do what he says .. and punch the keyboard through his examples.

He should (but probably won't) .. get a commission on my next programming project !!

Programming
Bending to Break
Published in Paperback by Cacoethes Publishing House, LLC (2008-01-15)
Author: AJ Hampton
List price: $13.75
New price: $8.92
Used price: $9.88

Average review score:

Erotic Huntress
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-17

Kayden Grey is bitten by her former lover Jullian, the most handsome and powerful of vampires. He meant to turn her into one like himself, but strangely enough Kayden manages to keep remnants of her humanity making her a half-breed. She has become one of the creatures she despises. The beautiful Kayden has spent her life hunting vampires and demons. The brothers Elijah and Micah, well known demon hunters, have joined her uncle's group after one such demon murdered their sister. Kayden and Micah are made hunting partners but they squabble continuously trying to hide an obvious lust for one another.

One night, in a cemetery, while patrolling for undead creatures they are attacked and overpowered by a succubus, a type of being which lives on the intense passion of others. All sexual reticence disappears leading to hours of ecstasy. When the lusty night comes to an end a chagrined Kayden wants to track down the succubus and kill it. That proves a long, difficult task allowing several opportunities for Kayden and Micah to lose their inhibitions. Along with a strong story line and a cast of exciting characters there are a number of erotic, lustful, scenes of steamy lovemaking.

Brilliant!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-05
A.J Hampton manages to draw you into her story from the first page. Hampton manages to create a world where I would love to be. I loved reading this book from start to finish and I know it will be one that I will read again and again!

Fun read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-23
Kayden Gray, a half-vampire, hunts the things that go bump in the night with her annoying partner, Micah. The pair fight each other, vying for the upper hand in their relationship, as they hunt evil. Their sexual tension is palpable, even though they both deny it--at first.

The story starts with the pair arguing. As they engage in their spat, they are overcome by a succubus. One, two, three, the pair find themselves in bed. As fun as the sex is, there's a downside. The succubus feeds on their sexual energy and plans to use it to become human and acquire a soul. On top of all this, Kayden's Ex, Jullian, comes to town ready to re-claim her.

The characters are interesting and keep the reader engaged. It is erotic, funny and action-packed. Check it out, it is a fun read.

Bending to Break ... from pleasure
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-22
Kayden is a demon hunter, with a vampire ex-lover, and now has a partner who is a pain in her backside.
Micah is a demon hunter with a dark past that he can't get over and now finds himself looking out for Kayden who he seems to hate for all the feelings she makes him feel.
While out demon hunting the two come across a succubus, now they can't keep their hands off each other. With the help of family, they are trying to find the succubus to remove whatever kind of magic she has put upon Micah and Kayden before it kills them. But that isn't their only problem. Kaydens ex, the vampire, is back in town causing problems. Can Kayden and Micah pull through all the supernatural bull**** and remain in love, or is it too much to overcome.
Bending to Break was my first AJ Hampton book, but it is definitely not my last. I look forward to future reads from her and I would suggest checking out her other titles.

Loved it!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-30
I absolutely love this book! I was a fan of AJ Hampton before this book, and I'm a fan now. I've read fantasy books where I can't relate to the characters at all, or everything seems impossible, but AJ makes her characters so real and relatable. Once I started reading, I couldn't put it down. I can't wait to see what else AJ comes out with!

Programming
The Best of 2600: A Hacker Odyssey
Published in Hardcover by Wiley (2008-07-21)
Author: Emmanuel Goldstein
List price: $39.99
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Average review score:

A very wonderful book!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-23
As a normal reader of 2600, this is a masterpiece. There is alot of knowledge over the years, wrapped up in one book. I would recommend this book to anyone!

This should be a history book for CS students.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-06
Very good read. Still reading it but the first section alone is worth the price. I wish they would have released it in 3 sections so I can easily travel with this book.

Very interesting
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-13
I have followed 2600 for years, but am by far not old enough to have been there for the start of it, this ... I hate to call it a book, but it is... book fills in a lot of very interesting and important history of the estranged phreaker/haxxor communities alike through republishing many of the key articles featured in the magazine/news letter as well as some extended back history on the whole shebang that was probably know to very few before this book came out. Understanding the histories of your favorite subject is important, it keeps you from repeating mortal mistakes, and teaches you what kind of things to look for in future exploits and conquests... hopefully ones without malintent. Hacking and prheaking is about the quest for knowledge, hopefully if you are of the mindset to cause anarchy, destruction, or 'own' someone, this book will set you on the right path... plus it is much more challenging to make something than to break something, though, the latter is often part of the process for the first.
But regardless of your ideologies, this is an important book to consume if you are in any way interested in the dark underbelly of computers, networks, or phone systems.

A book on the history of hacking by the people who wrote the magazine on hacking
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-24
Emmanuel Goldstien and his companions have written alot about hacking over the years, but now most of their writings have come together in tome form.

If there was anything you ever wanted to know concerting what hacking was like before the explosion of the Internet, or how hackers have been portrayed with biased by the media and in some cases the government, this is a must read book.

If you subscribe to 2600: The Hacker Quarterly or if you patiently wait at the book store or mail box for a new issue every three months, you will definitely want to pick up this book.

It will be interesting to see in the future, online hacker zines to try their hand at publishing their writings such as TOTSE and Phrack.

An important part of the history of computing
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-25
The hacker ethos is beautifully captured in this anthology. I've often skimmed 2600 at bookstores but it was only when I went through this hefty tome that I realized how deep and rich are the culture and accomplishments of the hacking community.

More than just the cartoonish representation in popular media, the hacking movement is a testament to creativity and innovation. Rightly so, this book is a celebration of cleverness and ingenious engineering instead of the more malevolent applications.

Programming
Camtasia Studio 3: The Definitive Guide (Wordware Applications Library)
Published in Paperback by Wordware Publishing, Inc. (2006-07-10)
Author: Daniel Park
List price: $39.95
New price: $12.96
Used price: $5.60

Average review score:

This book is a must have
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-03
For anyone that uses Camtasia Studio, Daniel Park's Definitive Guide is just that. With an engaging and easy to digest style, Daniel leads you through pretty much every aspect of using this program suite to it's full potential.

Along the way, he also covers the intangible and often overlooked aspects of preperation, planning, and time saving tips and tricks that make it possible to produce a quality poduct with Camtasia.

Daniel Parks' Book Is Great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-09
Daniel Parks' book Camtasia Studio 3 is an excellent resource for those just beginning to learn the application or with a fair amount of knowledge about it. Although he doesn't delve into certain subjects as deeply as I would have liked (e.g., limitations with certain options), at 550+ pages you're still getting a good deal of information.

I've found one or two areas of the book I don't believe I agree with Parks on in how to manipulate the software, but maybe I'm just not reading his instructions in the way he intended.

If you've never used Camtasia but expect to need some of the lesser-used options, I highly recommend you buy this book when you buy the software. Good job, Daniel!

Camtasia Studio 3: A Winner in My Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-04
This book is my Camtasia "Bible." It's well-written and has answered a lot of questions I didn't even know I had. Now that Camtasia has moved to Version 4, I wonder if the book will undergo a revision to cover all the great new features.

More than Camtasia
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-24
If I could give 10 stars I would. THis book is the definitive guide to Camtasia and much, much more. The Camtasia part doesn't even start till Chapter 5. You spend the chapters before that learning about the how-to and why of 1) training, 2) marketing and 3) demo presentations. It's a Camtasia book and a How-To-Do-Great-Presentation book in one. And all done in an entertaining by the author's warm personable conversational style.
I wish the author would write more books. About Sony Vegas, about Serious Magic Ultra 2, about search engines. He is so good.

Essential Reading to make the most of Camtasia
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-27
If you are serious about getting a proper understanding of Camtasia, then you definitely need this book. As far as I'm aware, it is the only such book available. Sure you can try using the Help material supplied with Camtasia, but it is difficult to learn well enough that way.

Camtasia Studio is a complex video recording and editing package, and there is a great deal of detail which is difficult to understand at first. Even with this book I'm needing to re-read whole chapters in order to get sufficient understanding of the suitable techniques to apply. The book isn't an easy read, but essential if you are to get maximum value from Camtasia.

The author, Daniel Park, has actually worked for the makers of Camtasia in the past, although he now works as a consultant. This gives him both an insiders and outsiders objective perspective, which allows a reader to get a fuller understanding of all the intricacies. The presentation is well-informed and conversational, although more attention could have been given to the learning needs of a naive user.

Programming
Certified Macromedia ColdFusion MX Developer Study Guide
Published in Paperback by Macromedia Press (2003-01-27)
Author: Ben Forta
List price: $34.99
New price: $1.00
Used price: $0.88

Average review score:

Very Concise
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-14
This is a very well-written study-guide. It gets to the point without getting too wordy. It could serve as a model for other study guides. But, I do have a few minor gripes. First, some of the pages were printed kind of blurry, a kind of shadow image. Second, there is too much preaching about what the author feels are best practices, some of which I question. Best practices questions are not on the exam, at least the one I took, and thus should be left out of a study guide except as perhaps small footnotes. There were also a few minor typos, but being a niche market I can forgive that for technical books.

Excellent review material
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-20
This is pretty much the only material you need to pass the certification. I was thinking of getting the exam buster as previous reviewer suggested, but exam buster does not promise same day delivery of their products, and with the exam one day away, I had only this guide to rely on.

Here is the approach I took that might work for you as well if you are pressed for time: Work on the end of chapter exercises first, mark all the questions that you are unsure of, if you have the time, go back and read the chapters and correct your own mistakes (I skipped this one because of time issue), and finally check the answers at the back. Note all the ones you were unsure of or didn't get right and studied the reasons provided with each answer. If you don't feel confident of the topic or you have made enough mistakes in the questions, read that chapter.

Before I read the guide, I scored a 70% using Ben's site. After a day of going through the guide using the "algorithm" above, I got an Advanced certification the next day. It goes to show you how good the guide is. One thing to be aware of, some answers are not correct (ran into about 4-5 incorrect answers at the back of the book), thankfully the answer analysis are correct most of the time so you can catch any mistakes in the answers the book provides. Do Ben a favor and get this book, he really deserves the royalty.

Couldn't have become Advanced Certified without this book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-31
Ben Forta's deep experience and practical application overflows from the pages of this book that I highly recommend. Of the dozens of computer books I've ever read, this one kept me astounded me with its perfect-sized chapters, handy reference and cross-reference segments, and the well-written pages. Not only is Ben Forta a good writer, he's an outstanding teacher.
Clarke Schroeder
Advanced Macromedia ColdFusion Certified

Coupon no longer valid
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-20
This is a very good book, however the coupon for 15% off of the exam is no longer valid. It expired December 31st of 2003.

As good as the first certification book.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-14
This book does a good job of giving you information on every possible topic of the certification exam. I used the original study guide to take and pass the first exam. This book includes just about everything in the first book, and goes into topics that are relaevent for MX (i.e. CFCs, XML, Flash intergration, etc.). If you want answers in a few pages vs. a few chapters, then buy this book.

Programming
CGI Programming 101: Programming Perl for the World Wide Web, Second Edition
Published in Paperback by CGI101.com (2004-03-01)
Author: Jacqueline D. Hamilton
List price: $29.95
New price: $29.95
Used price: $22.00

Average review score:

Great book for new and experienced web designers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-19
I bought this book when I first started designing web pages. That was 5 years ago and I still find this book helpful and easy to use. It is a great starting point for persons interested in web design. It has useful examples (I am still using some of these) to help get started.

The best book for beginners
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-19
This book is a great beginners guide as well as a reference booklet for veteran programmers.

Ms. Hamilton's style as an author is unbelieveably clean and understandable.

Understanding and Skill Needed for PERL Power
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
I am a neophyte script writer. I needed to learn basic PERL to set-up several web sites.

The book provided me with a very straight forward process to write scripts. As a self instruction book the arrangement and flow of the text was excellent. It was a great accomplishment to see my scripts work the first time. The only trouble that I encountered is when I didn't follow the process steps in writing the scripts.

I highly recommend this book.

The
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-21
I bought the previous edition of this book in 2001 because another reviewer recommended it and mentioned the added bonus of signing up with the CGI 101 hosting service. I bought the book AND started a web site with CGI 101. I have not regretted the past five years. The author has been helpful and communicative during the few occasions when the web site went down.

I can understand how someone who wants to be a guru (like the previous reviewer) would be disappointed, but this book is great for explaining most of the features anyone would need. Check out the [...] web site if you don't want to believe me.

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-21
This book is extremely helpful for anyone completely new or clueless on the subject of cgi programming. This was my first book on the subject of cgi's (w/ perl) and honestly, it was the best primer in regular expressions in perl. Let me stress its name is suggestive of the content... that is CGI 101 is for beginners. That was a good thing in my case since I was completely clueless when it came to dynamic web programming. It was my first purchase on the subject and I still consider it the most helpful.

I highly suggest this book for anyone looking for an entry point on the subject of CGI programming.


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