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Related Subjects: Strategy Roleplaying Developers and Publishers MUDs Simutronics Netrek Play-By-E-Mail Multiplayer Video Games Browser Based Chats and Forums
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Used price: $0.65

Awesome bookReview Date: 2002-10-12
An excellent workReview Date: 2003-11-10
Nicely Done AND a Quick Read!Review Date: 2002-12-30
An enjoyable readReview Date: 2003-01-24
This book teaches you not only how to do things, but _why_ you want to do things a certain way. Because of that, this book is streets ahead of anything else available on Java and Oracle - even the other Oracle Press Java books.
This book even teaches you how to use JDeveloper to create Java programs.
If you're a newby or an expert, this book will be useful when using Java and Oracle together.
The only book you need on Java and OracleReview Date: 2002-10-08


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.

Used price: $0.01

E-business, E-marketing, and E-promotions managers, read it!Review Date: 2001-10-15
Laurie and Ken have compiled an impressive amount of quantitative and qualitative research on which to base "The Soul of The New Consumer". Far and away the most important statement to remember in this book is:
"In effect, the Web site experience becomes the primary vehicle for building and reinforcing brand identity and preferences."
Information architecture (the structure of a web site), Internet marketing and Internet branding converge in the mind of the consumer. They should be developed in tandem. The web site experience IS the brand experience; think about it, think about your own web usage experiences.
"The Soul Of The New Consumer" goes on to discuss issues of great concern to many web users. These include privacy, the (non?) existence of customer loyalty, traffic generation, conversion strategies, and perspectives of E-customers. The quantitative research in the book can be found anywhere, the analysis makes the book valuable and the moderated discussions with consumers add a touch of real world insight that is missing from many books.
Now that you've read this book, and have a new agency that speaks English, you'll have a better idea of how to communicate with them. You'll know more of the right questions to ask; the answers to look for and maybe even understand a little of the E-jargon should the conversation digress to that level. You might even feel comfortable enough to make up some of your own!
Keep your e-customersReview Date: 2000-09-21
Great book. Very good insight into the new consumer's mind.Review Date: 2001-01-16
Invaluable Insight into Internet ConsumerReview Date: 2000-09-21
The Soul of the New ConsumerReview Date: 2000-10-01

Used price: $6.50

Organized and professionalReview Date: 2004-06-09
Michael Czeiszperger
Web Performance, Inc. Stress Testing Software
http://www.webperformanceinc.com
Superseded by a better second editionReview Date: 2004-06-22
That said, instead of this book you should get the second edition, which is a major rewrite, and also expanded in scope to include testing mobile systems. This edition is titled, "Testing Applications on the Web: Test Planning for Mobile and Internet-Based Systems" ISBN 0471201006, and is everything others have said about this first edition - and more!
Even with a better second edition, this book deserves the five stars I gave it because of the influence it has had on the testing profession. Moreoever, this first edition is not out-of-date, and is still a great book if you don't need information about testing mobile web systems at this time (although it's a safe bet you will in the future).
Grey Box Testing for Web ApplicationsReview Date: 2001-08-13
The shade of grey can vary from white box testing (full review of source code) to black box testing (no review of source code). You choose what level of information to gather depending on your budget, capabilities and judgment.
This book provides the first detailed approach to grey box testing, focussing on web-based application architectures. These architectures are based on a heavy use of components: application servers, web servers, load balancers, databases and the like. This book describes these components, suggests how they can fail and what you can do to anticipate, trigger, or detect such failures.
This approach is supported by the author's extensive experience testing web-based (and other) applications as president of a software testing company. It is augmented by plenty of good advice on how to communicate test results clearly.
Superb introduction to the complexities of web testingReview Date: 2002-02-27
A strong introduction to a new fieldReview Date: 2001-04-21
Hung Nguyen and I are co-authors of another book and good friends. I am not an unbiased reviewer. On the other hand, I wouldn't write this review if I didn't believe every word of it.
Hung's book breaks new ground. It will be useful today, and I believe it will have lasting value and influence.
Once you get beyond the superficial (not unimportant, but much less difficult) issues of usability testing that dominate so many discussions of web testing, you run into the really tough problems of web application testing. Hung Nguyen's book is about those harder problems.
The web-based application runs on a wider range of platforms than any other type of program in history. It doesn't even have control over its presentation layer (the user supplies the browser and the multimedia plugins, and these applications might change any time). What will the application look like on the changed browser? The application probably also relies on third party databases (which can change any time), third party network connections (which can change any time), third party security systems and other access control (which can change any time), etc., etc. Almost anything in this system can change any time. How do you deal with a system that has so many unknowns?
Hung's view is that web application testers must learn more about the technical details of the systems and understand how external variables can interact (and fail) with the application under test.
To help testers learn about the interaction (and testing) of applications with other system components, he wrote the field's first book on grey box testing.
This book has substantial value for what it teaches us about testing on the web. Beyond that, it teaches about thinking clearly and thoroughly when your application interacts in complex ways with other systems. I think his approach will have lasting value and lasting influence long after many of the detailed issues that he describes have been resolved and replaced with new ones.
Along with the original approach, Hung gives a powerful real-world example. He is the president of a company that publishes a web-based bug tracking system. To illustrate the types of tests that you can run and the types of bugs you can find, he opened his records and described real tests, real bugs, and real testing problems. It's a rare treat to see a discussion of testing experience by someone who knows testing, who also intimately knows the software under test, and who isn't constrained in what he can say by a nondisclosure contract.

Used price: $31.58

excellentReview Date: 2008-01-14
Mauri
Everything You Need to KnowReview Date: 2008-01-16
The first few chapters provide context and background information. Chapter 3 on Web Application Technologies provides particularly useful background info. The next 666 pages of the book are all about attacking the applications.
There next five chapters cover mapping application functionality, client side controls, authentication, sessions, and access controls. The coverage is comprehensive. I'm not new to these topics, but I learned so much in every chapter. The depth of coverage is amazing.
The next six chapters are the heart of this book. They cover injection, path traversal, application logic, XSS and related attacks, automating attacks, and information disclosure. You'll find full treatment of attacks we're all familiar with like SQL injection and cross site scripting as well as many that most of us haven't heard of before. The danger is real and these chapters need to be read.
The final next four chapters cover attacks against compiled applications, application architecture, web servers, and source code. The final two chapters are more useful as a quick reference. They provide an overview of the tools covered throughout the book and describe attack methodology discussed throughout the book for exploiting each technology.
This book scores five easily based on the relevance and value of the information.
More than just words!Review Date: 2008-02-22
This book is excellent for both the beginner and the advanced! Plenty of real examples! Walks the beginner through the concepts of foot printing. It explains the technologies and then for the advanced it talks about creating custom code for each vulnerability.
This is a must have for any security professional's library! it was worth every penny!
An excellent thorough resource for web application securityReview Date: 2008-01-20
This book is extremely up to date with its coverage of new AJAX and XSS-type attacks while still covering the relatively old vulnerabilities like buffer overflows and sql injections.
The authors are both professional penetration testers which gives them credibility over the information they provide in this book, and one of them is the author of the excellent free web application hacking tool called Burp Suite.
I would recommend this book to anyone that has a basic knowledge of how the Web works (http, javascript, cookies, html, and basics of a programming language like php or java) although you could learn these technologies as you are reading the book which would take some more time.
A Truely Excellent Resource for any Professional Web Hacker!Review Date: 2008-01-25
Kevin

Used price: $6.50

Fair infoReview Date: 2008-01-18
Get this bookReview Date: 2004-10-21
An Easy Way to Understand WiFiReview Date: 2003-12-17
Best book for the money about 802.11xReview Date: 2004-08-08
It definitely earns its five starsReview Date: 2003-10-05

Used price: $2.63

How to get a Perfect Bound copy of this bookReview Date: 2006-06-19
(I gave this 5 stars simply to not impact the book's current rating.)
Thorough in its explanations, lots of additional referencesReview Date: 2004-04-07
Note: This is not a paperback!Review Date: 2006-05-26
I gave it five stars for content, but this new method of publishing gets zero stars.
great book. Must have for CS students.Review Date: 2003-09-22
However, if in your work or your studies you feel that you need to gain a more thorough understanding of the W3C specifications related to XML, then this is the book to buy.
All the W3C specs are available for free on the web. The trouble is, W3C documents are designed to provide a precise definition of a standards, they are not designed to be especially intelligible by mere mortals (however technologically enclined). Some are quite readable, others far less.
Firstly, I really like that this book present all the relevant specifications and working drafts in perspective. Secondly, I found that it does a remarkably good job at translating these specifications (without simplifying them) in understandable terms.
In my work, I am interested in gaining as thorough as possible a view of XMl technologies and this book helps me greatly. I also like the fact that it present a well-organized bibliography at the end of each chapter (sadly many computer books from Wrox, O'reilly, Que an like don't have a bibiography as if to say "everything inside this book comes straight from the author's mind. DO not look any further).
I have reviewed for myself around twenty XML books. I found this book to be one of my top
favorite. I recommend it especially for:
- CS students or programmer with a theoretical bent.
- anybody who wants
to get a thorough overview of W3C standards.
Rather practical!Review Date: 2004-07-04
Kenneth B. Sall, the author of this book, organized this book in a fashion where each section could be studied on its own, and if there are references to the previous sections, they are appropriately mentioned. This way, one does not need to sit down and cover this 1000+ page book cover to cover to realize that the topic of conversation is. The stage is set at the beginning by the author commenting on the fact that XML can describe everything under the sun, even the kitchen sink:
"XML: ... maybe it's everything but the kitchen sink? Say, have you heard the one about the XML Kitchen Sink Language? ..."
I have been working with XML for sometime now, and I am still amazed at how it has grown and expanded in to our everyday lives in the past few years. One can spend months coming up to speed with the specifications and the XML "realm", and that's not enough. This book does not even cover, in a great detail at least, the Web services realm. That alone is a couple of thousand page book. The background topics are essential to any reader: basic XML syntax, DTD, Canonical XML, Namespaces and XML Schema. Once you have these topics covered and well understood, you can jump around to any other part of the book, displaying XML data for example or XML programming API's.
One can spend a couple of hours trying to figure out how these specifications fit in, but the author hs already
done the job with a very useful picture inside the cover page. What's your forte? Cascading Style Sheets to convert XML
data into a PDF document for example, or an XHTML document to display on a web site? XHTML is also covered in length, if you
do not know that is and what it offers over the plain old HTML.
My favorite topics were probably the authors explanation
of the XML parsing and the available API's and resources. SAX, DOM, JAXP and JDOM are covered in great detail.
* SAX
- the API that started it all. Minimal and light-weight. Fast and event driven.
* DOM - Memory intensive, complex, but
very powerful. It's a tree based model, and the tree represents the whole document.
* JDOM - java specific. Can be
used with either DOM or SAX.
* JAXP - java specific again, but easier to use than JDOM.
There are also a number of
C++ XML parsers that the author touches on such as the Apache Xerces, C++ SAX and many others, but the main topics revolve
around the four most popular parsers mentioned. These sections are mostly tutorials and how-to's. Each parser is used in
an example and example is analyzed piece by piece. DOM is covered in more detail due to the number of levels (DOM level 1-3)
that it has. Since DOM is more powerful and more complicated, the topic is a bit more advanced and would require more attention
from a novice. If you read thru the SAX chapter and understand it well, DOM would not be that much of hurtle, but make sure
that you read understand SAX first. Java centric API's including XML-RPC, JAXB, JDOM, JAXM are covered by the author to depict
how XML can be used and how it would benefit the application - and developers in-turn. The icing on the cake is when K. B.
Sall outlines the differences between SAX, DOM, JDOM and JSAX. He talks about each of the technologies in detail, tell you
what the advantage and disadvantage of each one is, and then it compares them against each other. By the time you are done
reading these sections, you would become an expert in XML parsing and programming.
XLink and XPointer. How can one leave without these two core technologies and tools? They are truly remarkable; easy to use, light weight and easy to learn. Well, they are well covered - as you would expect from this book. One thing about these topics is that they could be very abstract and need examples, and we got lots of those. The example depict the efficacy of how one can use XLink to create complex connections between sets of resources, even though you do not have a write access to those resources. This is very handy and resourceful technique is you need to build an e-commerce site. With XPointer, one can locate individual XML elements, set of elements or even a range of XML data between two points. The ability to specify "range" of elements is where the true power of XPointer is revealed.
The references, the related resources for each topic, simple to complicated examples and a CD filled with goodies, source code used throughout the book and the W3C specifications at your fingertips outline the some of the other benefits of Kenneth B. Sall's "XML Family of Specifications" book.

Used price: $16.66

Sandy's Book Is Great Help with E-MailReview Date: 2000-04-27
No computers in my pastReview Date: 2000-05-15
I read the paragraph by Horrace Deets, AARP's top guy, and agree that Sandy Berger can help you get the most out of your computer experience. I feel like I am making up for no computer experience and will have plenty of computer fun in the future.
Grown-ups Are Having All The Online FunReview Date: 2000-04-27
Easy to UnderstandReview Date: 2000-05-26
Your Official Grown-up's Guide to AOL® and the InternetYourReview Date: 2000-08-10
Review: Grown-up's Guide to AOL and the Internet, IDG Books Worldwide
Give me a Ticket to Ride on. The Grown-up's Guide to AOL and the Internet is your destination ticket to a rewarding online experience. America Online makes it easy to arrive online, but what do you do once you get there?
Open Grown-up's Guide to AOL and the Internet and find the road signs to:
* Travel and navigate AOL and the Web using links, browsers, and search engines
* Stay in touch with family and friends with AOL email and learn about Instant Messaging and Buddy Lists; and
* Explore popular topics online including travel, money, health, hobbies, retirement, research, and genealogy.
Grown-up's Guide to AOL and the Internet's Contents at a Glance:
Pro Reaction
Book font is 14 points for easy reading. Grown-up's Guide to AOL and the Internet pages are loaded with tips, definitions, cross-references and notes. Also, there are dictionary type thumb indexes through-out the 15 chapters for finding information quickly.
CD-ROM contains America Online version 3.0 and 4.0 for the Macintosh. Also, it contains for PC users' 5.0 for Windows.
Con Reaction
Missing from CD-ROM is Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator for Macintosh users. Utility shareware such as Always Online should have been included on the CD. Also, missing is summary of index of Websites mentioned in the book.
End Notes
The Grown-up's Guide to AOL and the Internet is an easy-to-use traveler's guide, written specifically for adults 50 and older. It shows you step-by-step how to use the Internet to enhance your daily life.
The book also shows you how to find invaluable resources and services such as e-mail, travel planning, hobbies, health and money management, and retirement tips.
Grown-up's Guide to AOL and the Internet simplifies and defines the lingo, walks you through the basics, and points you to online destinations and activities.
=== Paul Gerstenbluth is President of the ARIE Foundation. The ARIE Foundation's mission is to provide VA hospitalized patients with hobby materials and computers that helps in their stay and recovery.

Used price: $2.23

A Must Read for All GoLive UsersReview Date: 2004-11-08
Simple. Consolidated. Useful.
GoLive CS Tips & TricksReview Date: 2004-10-25
good companion to a standard GoLive textReview Date: 2004-11-24
The contents pages show a titular summary of the tips. Given that GoLive is from Adobe, it's no surprise to see an emphasis on the visual presentation of the pages. Typical is a tip about writing links in PDF documents, or another tip about converting an HTML file, and any associated referenced images, into a single PDF document. Of course, there are also several tips involving Adobe's flagship Photoshop.
Overall, the tips seem straightforward to understand and do. This appears to have been a deliberate choice by the authors. The book is most useful if you already have the basics of GoLive. A good companion to a standard text on GoLive.
Finally, A GoLive Book that Shines!Review Date: 2004-09-11
Being a Senior Web Developer and College Instructor, I highly recommend this book and give it 5 stars.
Now i want all my books to be like thisReview Date: 2005-05-09
Because of the way it's written - 200 tips, most of them on 1 or 2 pages - it's easy to pick it up at any time, read a minute, learn something valuable and put it down again. And you're almost sure to learn something new with every tip.

Used price: $0.94
Collectible price: $27.00

Worth a new look now that Internet businesses are picking upReview Date: 2005-05-18
Hope it helps me remain competitiveReview Date: 2003-03-14
The lessons stick with youReview Date: 2001-08-21
Strategies for both boom and bustReview Date: 2001-12-10
Interesting survival guideReview Date: 2001-07-05
Related Subjects: Strategy Roleplaying Developers and Publishers MUDs Simutronics Netrek Play-By-E-Mail Multiplayer Video Games Browser Based Chats and Forums
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Also covers Java stored procedures, EJB programming, servlets and JSP. I liked the conciseness of the book.