Services Books
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Used price: $31.32

Perfect for a GWT Beginner with a Programming BackgroundReview Date: 2008-08-27
GWT in PracticeReview Date: 2008-10-02
Excellent!Review Date: 2008-08-25
The authors of GWT In Practice are clearly seasoned Java programmers, and even in the second chapter they have introduced patterns that are appropriate for GWT solutions. They explain how GWT meshes with the MVC pattern, as well as other relevant patterns. Also, even in the first example, they introduce user-defined classes that extend widgets ... a very promising example of their direction through the rest of the book.
One caveat: I am not certain that this book would be easy to comprehend for someone who is a beginner. But I think this is generally true for GWT itself, and that anyone who wants to use GWT should have some training in Java.
One gripe: This is an unfair gripe, because there is no way that the authors could have achieved what I would have liked to see, specifically, a book based upon the 1.5 version of GWT (the book is based upon the 1.4 version). I haven't used GWT 1.4, but I get the impression that there are enough changes in 1.5 to make the information significant. But I'll get over it, if the book is as good as the first two chapters promise!
I don't often say this as fervently, but here's my recommendation: buy this book if you are learning GWT (and probably even if you already know GWT)! :)
A great book on software development as well as GWTReview Date: 2008-08-26
GWT in Practice - Excellent ResourceReview Date: 2008-07-01
The authors cover the GWT basics, to be sure, but more importantly, they demonstrate a way to really use GWT. They hit upon one of my thoughts when first trying to get my head around GWT: GWT is not a framework; it is a platform at best. They recognize this and help you work with the power and around the limitations of GWT.
The authors demonstrate common patterns and practices in the "language" of GWT. It was extremely satisfying to finally, with the help of this book, be able to articulate and execute all the patterns that I've been using in other systems, (e.g. MVC, PropertyListeners, etc.)
The authors also demonstrate how to use GWT in a variety of environments and build system. These concepts were useful, but I found myself skimming over pages at a time to get back to the "good stuff." (This was my primary knock in not giving it five stars.)
All in all, I highly recommend and I'll be ensuring that my team each learn the concepts presented.
Used price: $7.69

handbook of Home Health Standards and Documentation Review Date: 2007-08-03
Quickly settles disputes, answers questions, a "MUST" for all home care nurses & their management teams !!!!Review Date: 2006-04-02
With the often-confusing regulations and data gathering tools out there, at least we on the front lines have this portable manual to help us sort out our assessments and evaluations into the accurate coding and leveling criteria that supports what we do, what we observe, and allows for the appropriate revenue to support the levels of care our patients require. As OASIS data-gathering evolves, newer editions will be needed to keep up with the miriad of changes that will ensue, but at least here is a standard we can all make good use of, and I am willing to bet every nurse, from novice to manager, will find something in this manual that was not known or delineated as well to them in the past.
This manual would also make a wonderful teaching tool for nursing students. They may as well learn early on how intricate the data-gathering tools are in the real working world. Accurate notations on the OASIS forms can either make or break a case, not only regarding reimbursement, but as to whether the levels of care, and variety of disciplines, that you feel are needed, are allowed to provide services to your patient. Hasty and inaccurate translation of evaluations and assessments onto the OASIS forms results in inability to justify to Medicare that the levels of intervention you are requesting are appropriate.
VERY HELPFULReview Date: 2007-04-02
updated verisionReview Date: 2005-09-29
Home Health StandardsReview Date: 2002-12-30

Used price: $38.50

A masterful workReview Date: 2003-04-05
Innovative Ideas and Road Maps Welcomed in JapanReview Date: 2003-02-09
As a scientist who has made the transition from managing R&D in a global company to educating graduate students in management, I recommend Martin's book to entrepreneurs, scientists and fellow educators. I also agree with Harvard Professor Mark Thompson who states: "Alain martin has deftly incorporated, adapted, challenged, and complemented the insights of Fuld, Porter, Sun Tzu, and others to achieve a superb practical guide to the strategic and tactical management of institutional information."
Professor S. Ohara, Chiba Institute of Technology, Japan
Serious Book on Competitive IntelligenceReview Date: 2003-02-13
Apart from the first Chapter, which I skipped, here is my impression about the rest of the book.
Chapter 2 "Building A High-Performing Organization"
offers tips on the role of chief intelligence officers, issue managers, intelligence collectors and other scanning resources
in an intelligence-centric organization. The section on intelligence culture deserves a greater coverage.
Chapter
3 "Building Intelligence Capital" starts with a brief discussion on scanning but the competitive-intelligence road map is
a real gem.
Chapters 4 and 5 on intelligence platforms, search engines and the invisible Web are relevant to a wide range of occupations and activities beyond competitive intelligence. Just by applying the tips in the Brain Stem-Cell Case Study, I got my money and time worth within a week of reading Chapter 4.
Chapter 6 "Intelligence Security in Business and Government"
does not provide new material to intelligence experts but is a good primer, filled with examples, for managers.
Chapters
7 and 8 examine the process of opportunity and threat incubation through the lenses of Martin's powerful paradigm. The illustrations
suggest that the instrument is already used to capture new markets, and anticipate and manage various risks. The appendix
on the Mad-Cow issue in Britain supports the framework and adds credibility to it. It is written by Dr. Brian Morrissey, a
veterinary scientist who led government R&D on a host of complex national and global issues related to food and health protection.
The ideas and tools described in both Chapters 9 and 10 are the most advanced I have ever came across on stakeholders' analysis. Chapter 9 offers novel tips to identify the players who can make a difference in managing projects or reaching deals. It also sheds a new light on the role and power dynamics between these players. Chapter 10 helps readers map the positions and perceptions of the stakeholders, a pre-requisite for strategy formulation. Chapter 11 is a basic introduction to psychographics and VALS. Chapter 12 completes the book with concluding remarks about the application of intelligence to our personal lives.
The book is highly recommended to managers and students in military colleges, business and public administration. Chapters 7 through 10 will be of great interest to intelligence analysts who are constantly in search of new ways to connect the dots. I hesitate between a rating of 4 out of 5 stars for expert readers and 5/5 for managers. Actually, the framework alone is worth 5/5 and is without match in the world of competitive intelligence.
Fun to read. Good to grow customer-service sales.Review Date: 2003-04-24
Four of my high-school educated supervisors, who read the book, found Part I a down-to-earth eye-opener, and right on target, for making wiser choices and avoiding costly errors. They, however, thought Part II would be more applicable to middle and senior management. A drawback: the cases in the chapter on Psychographics lack the detail necessary to be useful.
I have also read C. S. Fleisher's Strategic and Competitive Intelligence. Both books represent, in my opinion, two different, credible and complementary approaches to intelligence-based decision-making. Except for some references, there is virtually no duplication of content. A big bonus!
Turning Intelligence into ValueReview Date: 2003-02-20
As usual, in one pithy phrase, management sage Peter Drucker captured the central problem facing organizations in uncertain environments -- they look in the wrong place. In volatile times, humans tend to hunker down in the cocoon of the controllable. Effective leaders embrace such times as an opportunity for greatness, when the prepared organization can jump ahead of ostrich-like competition.
Yet, few management advisors opine on how to combat these human tendencies and systematically scan, analyze and act in uncertain environments. Michael Porter's classic works on Competitive Strategy and Competitive Advantage did dispense advice on competitive intelligence gathering, but did not attend to the conversion of intelligence into commercial advantage. Alain Martin's new book "Harnessing the Power of Intelligence" compiles tested processes which create such value.
Martin's frameworks are based on research at American Express, Boeing, Dell, DuPont, GlaxoSmithKline, and Microsoft as well as application of his ideas in businesses, government, and the military. The book has the most up to date, and complete list of intelligence sources. For example, Martin cites the University of California at Berkeley "invisible web" project, which has shown that search engines only document about 15% of the business intelligence available publicly, because the vast majority of it is either not in a standard hypertext format or not linked to a public domain name (the silent campers). His framework on issue incubation, shows that large scale issues go through a relatively predictable process of incubation and development. Many leaders make the mistake of getting on an issue too early or too late. The issue incubation process delineates ways to recognize the progression of topics, and provides advice on if, when and how to intervene. Martin also has a tool called, Factional Analysis that helps a manager analyze who is likely to influence a volatile situation (from allies to adversaries). This tool is much richer than the traditional stakeholder analysis for it includes roles that do not fit in the normal economic calculus. For example, he includes "fanatics" in the analysis -- people whose sole purpose is to disrupt.
A leader can take the advice in this book and use it to guide
outward looking intelligence, assess the current state of issues (or do a triage on a surprise event), and then take concerted
action.
At points, the book does suffer from the same weakness of Porter's books in that its desire for completeness,
the text often has a "list-like" feel. But, on balance this book provides a framework full of tested tools to turn uncertainty
into value.


Good patient materialReview Date: 2008-11-27
A book every woman should readReview Date: 2008-11-20
Easy Reading Self Help for Pelvic PainReview Date: 2008-11-18
Pelvic Pain and Sexual DysfunctionReview Date: 2008-11-09
Great Help for Pelvic PainReview Date: 2008-10-27

Used price: $3.52

Marya Mann's Biography Review Date: 2008-09-21
Marya Mann, Ph. D., earned her B. A. in English from Boston University. After studying with Joseph Campbell and Jean Houston, she received her doctorate from the Union Graduate School in 1986. In her 30-year career in Dance, Yoga, and Theater, she not only pioneered research in the Psychology of Creativity but invented practical applications of the arts in sustaining social harmony. She has taught more than 20,000 students from Sydney to St. Louis, was a founding member of the Holy Cow! Theater Co. in Colorado, and conducted anthropological research on Pacific Arts and Cultures in Bali, Indonesia, where she performed and taught at the "Center for Art and the Future" with Takdir Alisjhabana.
While on the field faculty of Regis University, she developed the highly successful Renaissance Arts Project for youth-at-risk which was funded by the Colorado Council on the Arts and Humanities and the Boulder Arts Council. She founded the Lotus Living Arts Center in Illinois to help solve societal problems through cross-cultural arts in the heartland of the United States. The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers sponsored her Environmental Arts programs with thousands of children for Earth Day activities in the 1990's at Carlyle Lake. Co-Author of Healing Our Planet, Healing Our Selves with the Dalai Lama, Barbara Marx Hubbard, and Deepak Chopra, she currently writes, consults, and teaches on the Big Island in Kailua Kona, Hawaii.
[...]
shift momentumReview Date: 2007-01-15
somwhow we need shift the momentum on the planet, and i agree with the general consensus in this book that it happens one person at a time. if every person were to read a book like this, i can only imagine the personal and global shifts that we would see. good work!
For the people who will be part of the solutionReview Date: 2005-12-02
This is a book for everyone who intends to grow to meet the challenge of our present, and future. It is well worth spending our life's time on!
Recommended Reading Review Date: 2005-09-12
Powerful visions for personal and planetary healingReview Date: 2005-08-18

Used price: $1.00

Persuasive (but "wonkish")Review Date: 2007-07-16
The book's greatest strengths may also be it's greatest weakness. This book is "wonkish" -- filled with hard data and logic. If you're looking for entertaining anecdotes or emotional arguments, this is not the book for you.
Only problem is he uses the word 'free'Review Date: 2007-07-13
Free Markets are HealthyReview Date: 2007-01-11
Extremely important book for an extremely important topicReview Date: 2007-03-04
Cannon and Tanner's book starts with a foreword by the Hon. George P. Shultz: "We begin with a riddle. What country's health care system offers the best health services in the world, is consistently criticized for not being accessible enough, and yet is so accessible that overutilization is leading to runaway costs?" The answer is, of course, America.
The following 147 pages offers a detailed analysis of what's wrong with American health care (government and insurance industry policies that lead to overuse of medical services) and what's right (the strong remnants of a free market system that encourages innovation, high quality, at an often lower cost). Both detailed and heavily footnoted, but also very readable at the same time, "Healthy Competition" strikes the right balance between a dense academic paper and a clarion call for action.
In concluding the book, Cannon and Tanner write:
"Despite its marvels, America's health care sector continues to present troubling symptoms: excessive costs, uneven quality, a lack of useful information for patients and providers, extraordinary waste, and enormous burdens for future taxpayers. An accurate diagnosis points to too much government influence and too little choice and competition. Proposals to increase the role of government would aggravate these symptoms. More subsidies or controls would drain from the medical marketplace even more of the dynamics that drive other sectors of the economy toward lower prices and higher quality. The only sure remedy is to restore those dynamics to the health care sector.
"Although there are dark clouds on the horizon, we are heartened by the creation and steady growth of health savings accounts. HSAs have already begun to change private-sector health care from within, and will enable a reexamination of the role of government in health care."
The last citation in "Healthy Competition" comes from a June 1, 2004 Harvard Business Review article by Michael Porter and Elizabeth Teisberg. It deals with the oft-heard argument that we somehow should not apply free market principles to the health care sector:
"It is often argued that health care is different because it is complex; because consumers have limited information; and because services are highly customized. Health care undoubtedly has these characteristics, but so do other industries where competition works well. For example, the business of providing customized software and technical services to corporations is highly complex, yet, when adjusted for quality, the cost of enterprise computing has fallen dramatically over the past decade."
Cannon and Tanner accept this argument while also embracing the argument of many of the proponents of government control of health care because it is special and distinct from other parts of the economy - they just come to the opposite conclusion, concluding in their last paragraph, "...Unlike software, wireless communications, or banking, health care involves very emotional decisions, which often entail matters of human dignity, life, and death. However, we do not see the gravity of these matters as a reason to divert power away from individuals and toward government. Rather, we see the special nature of health care as all the more reason to increase each consumer's sphere of autonomy. The special nature of health care makes it all the more important that we use the competitive process to make health care available to more consumers - and makes it all the more important to get started now."
Two side notes of a personal nature: on February 1, 2007, I introduced AB 245, a bill that would allow the tax deductibility of contributions to HSAs (California is one of only four states that do not treat HSAs as tax deductible); and author Michael Cannon is someone I have grown to respect from our first meeting in 2004 as Lincoln Fellows of the Claremont Institute. I suspect we will be hearing quite a bit from Mr. Cannon over the next few decades - and, if policymakers are smart, they will listen carefully to what he has to say.
Reviewer: Chuck DeVore is a California State Assemblyman, a retired lieutenant colonel in the Army National Guard and the author of "China Attacks."
CJFReview Date: 2006-03-20
The book makes clear that market based proposals to reform health care are designed to lower the cost of care and increase coverage. These are proposals that are critical to all Americans.
Collectible price: $11.11

Henry Reed!Review Date: 2008-11-25
I recently went back and reread what I first consider the first "real" book I read while I was a child: *The Year of the Jeep* also by Keith Robertson. considered it my first real book because it didn't have any illustrations, even on the cover (in the copy I originally borrowed from the Oak Lawn Library.)
I have a review of it here, somewhere.
(If you are an adult) I would strongly advise going back and finding the "first book I ever read" and rereading it. Fun.
Babysitting and making moneyReview Date: 2007-07-01
Fun and Games in this "classic"Review Date: 2004-08-04
Baby-sitters and others will identify with HenryReview Date: 2005-01-22
Even though this might seem like a somewhat dull premise, the character of Henry Reed is so indomitable that he maintains our interest throughout. Children will be impressed with his ability to apply his skills to seemingly insurmountable obstacles, and also with the way that Henry manages to earn respect from the adults that he meets. His intelligence and Midge's creativity lead to amusing solutions for outwitting the children that are determined to be disruptive.
The book is presented as Henry's journal, which allows us to experience the events through Henry's eyes. This works fabulously.
The Henry Reed series was captivating to me as a child in the early eighties, and remained a favorite of mine for many years. Anyone who gives it a chance will fall in love with it.
More fun from Henry and MidgeReview Date: 1999-02-17

Used price: $0.88

Great resource to get the ball rollingReview Date: 2008-02-17
Here Comes the Guide: Southern California: Wedding Locations and Services (Here Comes the Bride Series)Review Date: 2007-01-04
A Bride's Best Friend!Review Date: 2000-02-18
Then I started actually going out, visiting places, and realizing that it wasn't so easy to find the perfect place! I quickly realized I was going to have to work a lot harder than I thought to mesh the right church location, my number of people, and a convenient indoor reception site. So I came back to the Guide--time and again! Soon I had it dogeared and filled with notes as I reconsidered the options I'd been so quick to skip past earlier. The statistics on each site helped keep me focused and helped me and my fiance consider new places when others fell through, and keep the attributes of each place in mind. The descriptions of the reception sites are detailed, positive and generous-but-not-misleading. We ultimately booked a site listed in the Guide and are thrilled to have found it.
Now that I've moved on to choosing a photographer, I went to the Guide again. First I read through each photographer's profile in the book, then went on the Guide's website! It's so easy to use - - it allows you to jump to photographers' websites and see their portfolios, all without making appointments or driving around! I feel satisifed that I don't need to look beyond the professionals listed in the Guide, since the authors have already done the legwork in finding people with high standards and good customer service.
If you really want to explore all possible options for your ceremony, reception, and event professionals, you will love Here Comes The Guide! The hardcopy book and the website are thorough, pleasant to read, and - - most importantly - - really helpful. My mom keeps saying, "I had no idea it was this complicated to plan a wedding in this day and age!" Here Comes the Guide goes a long way towards relieving the complication!
The Guide screens its recommended vendorsReview Date: 2000-12-09
As The Guide states on Page 483, their process "involves interviewing 15-20 other event professionals. We call every single reference and ask about the professionalism, technical competency and service orientation of the advertiser in question. ... Those candidates who received consistent, rave reviews made it into The Guide."
Using The Guide as a starting point (combined with the internet, magazine ads, and friends' recommendations), I conducted exhaustive research of my own of wedding professionals in Los Angeles and beyond. I wound up hiring three vendors who had been featured in the Guide (caterer, band and florist, 11-11-00 wedding). All performed beyond my greatest expectations, and my guests cannot stop raving about the "fabulous," "amazing," and "out of this world" food, music, and flowers. Clearly, The Guide got it right.
So don't be fooled by the relative size of the vendor section compared to pages allotted to reception sites. The vendor section may be small because they are the cream of the crop, thanks to the Guide's legwork.
A real lifesaver!!Review Date: 1999-04-19

Used price: $32.83

A ReminderReview Date: 2008-09-25
A Reminder
Amos Lassen
I have had many different kinds of experiences in my life but one that certainly stands out is Hurricane Katrina and I think that is not only because of what I saw but how it so drastically changed my life. There are still pictures in my mind that I do not think I shall ever forget and I am not sure that I want to forget.
Thomas Neff in "Holding Out and Hanging On" allows me to remember and in his photographic essay, he shows us the real impact that Katrina had on the lives of those who went through it. Looking at his photographs is like having a conversation with the people in them. We see moments that go beyond what the camera saw. There is great sensitivity here and a great deal of insight. Many of us who experienced the storm will never forget what we saw but it seems to me that others who were not directly involved need to be reminded of one of the worst disasters in American history. We all must remember Katrina.
Neff not only gives us photographs but also interviews with those affected directly by Katrina and the book is a wonderful testament to those who have been able to rebuild their lives but we must remember that not everyone has been that lucky. A lot has been accomplished since the storm but there is still plenty to do.
Neff's photos and the text shows us what kind of man the author is--he is filled with compassion and courage and an example for all of us As it broke my heart, once again, to see these pictures, I can only imagine what was going on in Neff's mind as he took them. The book documents a disaster--one we should never have to face again.
REAL Katrina WorkReview Date: 2008-01-12
Brilliant, insightful, yet beautiful vision into the reality of Katrina ...Review Date: 2008-05-22
Vision of an owlReview Date: 2008-02-13
Mr. Neff has been my friend and mentor for over ten years now and I could not be more proud to own this necessary book of socially and historically necessary photography that is flawless in it's execution and communion with the spirit and people of New Orleans.
Bradly Dever Treadaway
Faculty Member, The International Center of Photography
New York, NY
Capturing What Words Alone Cannot Fully ExpressReview Date: 2008-01-31


This is one nasty man!Review Date: 2006-04-18
This new book is very helpful.Review Date: 2004-06-11
Outstanding bookReview Date: 2004-06-03
Brilliant!Review Date: 2004-06-03
Makes me AngryReview Date: 2004-06-03
Related Subjects: Litigation Medical Law Practice Support Lawyers and Law Firms Intellectual Property Court Reporters Paralegal Services Dispute Resolution Expert Witnesses Practice Management
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