Computers and Internet Books
Related Subjects: Hardware Security Software Internet
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Used price: $2.48

Missing Manual on eBayReview Date: 2007-07-12
Whatever "it" is, you'll find it in the Missing Manual...Review Date: 2005-11-21
Contents:
Part 1 - Buying on eBay: Ready, Set, Shop!; Bidding, Paying, and Following Up; Finding - and Getting - Bargains; Power Buying Strategies
Part 2 - Selling on eBay: Sell Stuff, Make Money; Honing Your Competitive Edge; Going from Hobby to Business; Specialty Selling; Cool Tools for Sellers
Part 3 - Finding Other eBayers and Getting Help; Finding Help
Part 4 - Appendixes: Where to Learn More; HTML for eBayers; Other Auction Sites; Index
Like all other eBay books, this one covers how to buy and sell on eBay. The writing's good, but there'd be nothing special if it stopped there. Where this book earns its keep is when it goes into areas I haven't seen covered in any other book. I've never seen a book go into any detail on other resources to learn about eBay, such as call-in internet radio shows and newsletters. I've never seen a book cover HTML in a small number of pages in order to allow the seller to create better auction pages. There's good coverage on third-party sites that give you more information on how to best price your auctions. There's even material on how to evolve from buying and selling as a hobby to running a business based on eBay. Package all this up with clear writing and numerous screen shots, and you really *have* found the missing eBay manual.
To paraphrase eBay's latest ad campaign... "Whatever you're looking for, you'll find *it* in eBay: The Missing Manual"...
Fantastic BookReview Date: 2006-09-10
It is both for beginners and beyond.
A good introduction, but probably due for an updateReview Date: 2006-03-19
SELL AMERICAN!!Review Date: 2006-02-23
Conner, begins by showing you everything you need to get going on eBay. Then, she shows you how to bid on eBay auctions with confidence. The author continues by showing you how to search better than the competition and bid smarter. In addition, she then shares other secrets serious shoppers use to prevail on eBay. The author also introduces eBay tips and tricks. Then, the author shows you how to hone in on your strategy for a competitive edge. Next, she shows you how to turn your eBay hobby into a part- or full-time business. Next, the author shows you how to get in on the action and create a sales niche within eBay's specialty auctions. Then, she briefly describes the software that you can use on eBay. The author continues by presenting general and specialized discussion groups, both on and off eBay, that will help you make satisfying connections. Finally, she covers a Learning Center just for newbies, a Help page, interactive help via live chat or e-mail, a centralized Services page, a site map, discussion boards, and more.
After reading this excellent book, you'll be using eBay like an old pro. In other words, this book was will help you ramp up your eBay experience--find more bargains, build better auctions, and close more sales.

Used price: $2.35

Unbelievably GoodReview Date: 2007-09-20
In addition, his ability to put technological developments in context allow the reader to see the larger factors and trends that have and continue to drive change. A seemingly chaotic and overwhelmingly fast-changing industry suddenly seems logical and "trackable" after reading Walters' book. In this way, it's easy to forgive the fact that the text is a bit out of date. Everything I've read about today's technology I've easily been able to connect back to the ideas I learned here.
Truly one of a kind.
Pretty cool book!Review Date: 2005-07-22
Review from an Experienced Marketing Manager's PerspectiveReview Date: 2002-03-14
A REMARKABLE FIND !Review Date: 2002-03-14
The most noteworthy aspect of the book is its superb coherence in presenting vast amounts of computing knowledge arranged in for easy understanding. Information and explanations in one chapter are referenced in subsequent ones, never failing to explain connections among them, with a view to present an overall picture of how computers and computing works.
Each chapter highlights technical terms related to computing and information technology, provides an overview of specific aspects as for example "An Overview of How Storage Works" (Chapter 2, p.40), and highlights in grey explanations of widely used terms such as "Disks From a User's Perspective" (p. 56). Each chapter also ends with a summary list of questions that focus on self-evaluating one's grasp of the chapter's contents.
E. Garrison Walters' book will continue to enrich the understanding of all who enjoy working with computers at work or for pleasure. I wish this book had been available to guide me in computing long before I found it, and, that I had written it ! It is a remarkable achievement!
Great coverage of the IT fieldReview Date: 2002-12-07
However, with the rapid advancements in technology, the book is a bit dated. I would highly recommend this book to anyone who wants a gain a great breadth of knowledge in the field of Information technology, in a short period of time.


Easy introduction to Hibernate with AnnotationsReview Date: 2008-06-19
The chapters on Mappings and How Hibernate Works are very good. Keep a copy of Java Persistence with Hibernate to supplement some of the concepts. This book is meant to be an introduction so does not cover advanced topics like transactions, caching and optimization.
The Best and Easiest Way to Learn HibernateReview Date: 2008-06-07
Focussed, Funny and Informative - Definitely a "Must Have" Hibernate BookReview Date: 2008-06-04
This book is a must have.
This book made Hibernate easy for meReview Date: 2008-06-18
1. The book was written in simple, clear and concise manner. It is easy to understand and absorb.
2. The code examples in the book works.
3. The book uses a simple development and deployment environment so that I did not have to download a tons of software to get the examples working.
4. The examples use mySQL database instead of HSQLDB like in other Hibernate books. So it is more practical.
5. This book is not just about learning Hibernate. It is also about how to apply this technology properly. The author included tutorials on how to design the persistent layer using Data Access Object and Factory design patterns.
6. This book has web application examples using JSP and Hibernate running on Tomcat. These examples are very simple yet very poweful. They get to the point.
7. Finally, about the author. Cameron loves to hear from the reader. He accepts the reader's comments and he shares his ideas freely with the reader.
No doubt-best book to learn Hibernate!Review Date: 2008-05-24
The only thing I wish the book would cover more is how to use Hibernate with servlets or JSPs or other web front end technologies since now a days people want to learn how to make Hibernate work with their web applications. But I understand wholeheartedly why the author didn't do a more deeper coverage. Perhaps he should for his next book (hint...hint).
I also found some minor mistakes or omissions, not in the code, but in some of the explanations. For example, reference to where the library zip files are located (page 50) is incorrect and to get Log4j to work, the author should have explicitly stated where the log4j.properties file needs to be saved(page 97). He explicitly states where the other files need to be saved, but for some reason, he made an exception for the log4j properties file. I had to use trial and error to figure that out (needs to be in the c:\_mycode directory). Sorry the only reason I'm mentioning these mistakes here is because the book's website at the time of this review doesn't appear to have a link to see/send errata and download sample code.
I look forward reading the book to the very last page. So far so good! Without hesitation, I highly recommend this book.


Very useful and timely bookReview Date: 2006-06-24
· Hardening Oracle environment
· Avoiding the use of mod_plsql
· Not making a database a web server and not store HTML pages in the database
From my perspective the rules concerning Web services and cross-site scripting are the most valuable. Working on these applications I see how vulnerable is a database server due to some security holes; therefore avoiding the holes is important.
This is a very good bookReview Date: 2005-11-23
A Well-Rounded Textbook for DBAs, Auditors and InfoSecReview Date: 2007-03-23
If you are seeking to secure your databases AND/OR audit them, this book contains both suggestions for scripting, triggers etc as well as where to look for vulnerabilities.
Bravo to the author, and THANKS, I'm using regularly, the best compliment of all.
Very good bookReview Date: 2005-09-23
Great bookReview Date: 2005-06-19

Used price: $2.79

An excellent book with well explained working examplesReview Date: 2006-03-02
If you are interested in learning TCP/IP programming on Unix platform this is the only book you need.
It does assume that you have knowledge of some C programming, but it does not assume that you are an expert.
Excellent Book.
A Perfect TextReview Date: 2005-10-18
Professor Comer's books are wonderful, but his contributions don't stop there. If you pride yourself on writing and are new to the academic realm you might find it useful to go to his website and read his advice on writing a dissertation. If you are a PhD student, or a master's student writing a thesis, this should be a mandatory stop. If you are simply a person who takes pride in writing clearly, you will learn important things.
Like Cliff NotesReview Date: 2005-12-27
Pro (This book): I like how it explained what each important function did (like read/write)
Con: The example code could be a little better.
This book is well-written and will be a good reference once I'm through with my class. I bought all 3 volumes since I could get them at a great price. What especially helped: sometimes books would take up to 50 pages explaining a topic. The "Internetworking with TCP/IP" series are excellent at giving the bottom line and at times makes it easier to understand the details within the longer-winded pages of other books. In a way, to me, it's like a set of cliff notes to my textbook.
If you're baffled about network programming, these books might be worth a try.
The only books to learn TCP/IPReview Date: 2000-08-30
A good,readable,working guide to TCP/IP SocketReview Date: 2001-01-13
You don't need much Unix to do exercise in this book.About the only System calls you need to know are fork(),Select(),sigalarm() and execve(). The book could have been expanded to cover HTTP,SOAP and some other protocols to give it a 5stars.

Used price: $82.00

A+++Review Date: 2005-09-23
Par Excellence!Review Date: 2006-11-14
Surely helps if you have taken a linear algebra course before. Some students who haven't had a linear algebra course find the math nomenclature formidable in the beginning.
Quite goodReview Date: 2006-07-31
Too VerboseReview Date: 2005-12-17
Nice intuition and good coverageReview Date: 2006-01-01
The quality goes down somewhat, perhaps neccessarily, in the latter half of the book as topics are presented less carefully, and in a somewhat rushed manner in order to cover all of the material the authors decided to include. Given that the fundamentals are covered so well, perhaps this is a fair trade.
The only real negative I can think of is that it's a small crime for professors to create their own publishing companies (Athena only publishes works by a small group of MIT professors) and then still charge outrageous amounts for the books. This would be completely unacceptable were it not for the fact that, unlike most self-published work, this book's production quality is on par with that of the large publishers.

Used price: $0.18

good reference for C++ programmersReview Date: 2003-05-22
It also covers some Java libraries and briefly outlays applets. There does not seem to be any coverage of servlets or server-side programming.
As good a reference as it is, it seems to be missing some things, most notably initializations. There are pieces of Java code I've seen something like:
subr1(new Foobar {blah(){foo;} blah1(){bar;}});
i.e., a class (Foobar) is being initialized dynamically before calling a function subr1(). The exact circumstances of initialization of variables and dynamic classes are not covered at all in this book.
Other than that, this book is great.
Swiss Army Knife of Java manualsReview Date: 2002-09-26
And like JIAN, there is a good amount of reference material in this book, not with the extended detail of JIAN, but enough to get by most of the stumbling stones one encounters while programming.
As a student, I can only carry so many books in my backpack; when I'm programming in the university labs, I want concise and useful as my qualities. At home, I have my Java reference library (CJ, JIAN, etc.), which I consult when I'm at a quandary; for portability and my lab work, this book is the Swiss Army knife of references, one that I carry regularly, and one that can solve about 75-80% of Java problems I encounter.
Swiss Army Knife of Java manualsReview Date: 2002-09-26
And like JIAN, there is a good amount of reference material in this book, not with the extended detail of JIAN, but enough to get by most of the stumbling stones one encounters while programming.
As a student, I can only carry so many books in my backpack; when I'm programming in the university labs, I want concise and useful as my qualities. At home, I have my Java reference library (CJ, JIAN, etc.), which I consult when I'm at a quandary; for portability and my lab work, this book is the Swiss Army knife of references, one that I carry regularly, and one that can solve about 75-80% of Java problems I encounter.
Swiss Army Knife of Java manualsReview Date: 2002-09-26
And like JIAN, there is a good amount of reference material in this book, not with the extended detail of JIAN, but enough to get by most of the stumbling stones one encounters while programming.
As a student, I can only carry so many books in my backpack; when I'm programming in the university labs, I want concise and useful as my qualities. At home, I have my Java reference library (CJ, JIAN, etc.), which I consult when I'm at a quandary; for portability and my lab work, this book is the Swiss Army knife of references, one that I carry regularly, and one that can solve about 75-80% of Java problems I encounter.
Swiss Army Knife of Java manualsReview Date: 2002-09-26
And like JIAN, there is a good amount of reference material in this book, not with the extended detail of JIAN, but enough to get by most of the stumbling stones one encounters while programming.
As a student, I can only carry so many books in my backpack; when I'm programming in the university labs, I want concise and useful as my qualities. At home, I have my Java reference library (CJ, JIAN, etc.), which I consult when I'm at a quandary; for portability and my lab work, this book is the Swiss Army knife of references, one that I carry regularly, and one that can solve about 75-80% of Java problems I encounter.

Used price: $140.00

The titles of the book and exam match! What else do you need?Review Date: 2007-04-09
Some people hate reading PDFs and like using a book. If you're one of these people, by all means get this book!
The PDF availablility for the JNCIA, JNCIS, JNCIP and JNCIE are shown in this link. I'm not sure how Amazon handles links, so I'll obscure it.
[...]
Replace hxxp with http.
OK, so I don't own the bookReview Date: 2006-12-06
The Complete Reference for JNCIP LabReview Date: 2006-03-30
Passed JNCIP LabReview Date: 2004-06-03
Superb book superb qualityReview Date: 2005-01-15

Used price: $29.00

Best Tech Book I ever readReview Date: 2008-04-03
This book was the best on the topic that I have read.Review Date: 2007-12-27
I liked this book so much that I also bought the ASP.NET, SQL, and Visual Basic 2005...all topics I need to brush up on. As far as I can tell these other books follow the same great format.
From someone who thousands of dollars worth of technical and programming books...these are great even for beginners. However if you are not familiar with vb2005 get murach's visual basic 2005 to read first.
Highly Recommended for Someone Wanting to Learn ADO.NETReview Date: 2007-11-03
Another Winner from MurachReview Date: 2007-10-26
The best part of Murach books (including this one), aside from the paired page layout, is that they make no assumption about the reader's skill level, and cover enough background on each topic to ensure that you will come away with a thorough understanding of not just what and how, but also why.
Both beginner and expert programmers alike will find this book extremely useful, and it's a great addition to the Murach family of programming reference and tutorial books.
To the point!Review Date: 2007-10-04
This book doesn't cover all the theory in the world about a topic. Also, not all topics. But it tells you how to use them and what to watch for.
I am glad to have read it.

Used price: $15.99

Excellent guide to get started using the Win32 API w/ .NETReview Date: 2004-03-28
I agree with the book that the .NET Framework is mostly targeted at business developers and the Internet for B2B and B2C applications, as well as internal Enterprise applications. Having said that, I have found the .NET framework lacking, and as the author points out, most likely due to how young it is in comparison to the Win32 API.
This book will get you up and running with making those Win32 API calls when you can't find that same functionality duplicated in the .NET Framework. There isn't much documentation on this subject matter on MSDN or the web (searching on Google), so this is pretty much it. The author did a great job, however, at times, the examples were a little light or topics weren't explained as thoroughly as they should have been. For example, the author will tell you what data type he used in place of a native Win32 data type, but doesn't clearly explain his reasoning for the choice. But other than that small complaint, this book is a must have for any .NET developer.
This book RocksReview Date: 2003-08-22
A Very Good ResourceReview Date: 2003-07-20
Excellent companion piece to Adam Nathan's bible...Review Date: 2004-08-17
What I liked best was the author didn't take the cop out solution (managed C++) unless it was absolutely necessary. Most of the code examples in the book are in C# and this might be of some concern to the VB.NET programmers. The chapters are well organized and there's an appendix with 50+ good tips on PInvoke. If you are still struggling with your PInvoke interop problem after reading this book, it's time to bring out the heavy weight (Adam Nathan's bible) -- good luck!!!
Atul
Great book overall.Review Date: 2003-05-21
Related Subjects: Hardware Security Software Internet
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