Professional Books
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a twist on technocolorsReview Date: 2008-01-21
Eye candyReview Date: 2007-12-15
THIS ONE IS THE BEST!Review Date: 2007-12-03
An inspiration for designers!Review Date: 2007-03-26
A Feast for the EyesReview Date: 2007-08-22

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Bought it for school and still use it. Review Date: 2007-10-02
I think they should come up with a computer program to make it even easier, but hey, writing is good practice. I rated it four stars, because I haven't found some of the information int he back too helpful- of course I haven't thoroughly read it. I guess it's there for something, but I'm a stickler for not including unnecessary information.
Understanding by DesignReview Date: 2007-07-21
Understanding by Design: Professional Development Workbook
Understanding by Design: WorkbookReview Date: 2007-10-13
UbD PD workbookReview Date: 2007-05-13
Backward design fanReview Date: 2006-11-03


Great VoiceXML bookReview Date: 2002-04-05
Excellent resourceReview Date: 2002-02-03
Good coverage, up-to-date, very userfulReview Date: 2002-03-02
If you're looking for a reference, this is the book to get. The reference section is current VoiceXML 2.0 (October 2001), which is an advantage in and of itself. But the real strength of the reference section is its depth. Each element, (e.g., There is a brief discussion of the architecture of a VoiceXML app, and a couple of paragraphs discussing the differences between VoiceXML 1.0 and 2.0. The book also gives, contrary to my expectations, a history of the voice industry, a history of VoiceXML, and a discussion of players in the industry. What makes this book's treatment of these topics unusual is that the authors (particularly Kunins, I suspect) actually know these fields. I don't normally want these sections in a reference book (it just adds bulk around the section I really want) but I found them quite compelling here. I learned quite a bit from reading them. The book also contains sections on Dynamic VoiceXML, Security, Voice App Life Cycle, VUI Design, the Future of VoiceXML, and a case study. I haven't read these sections yet, so I can't comment on them. I do know, however, that the sections I have read are sufficiently superior to make this THE VoiceXML book on their own. If I were to criticize the book, I would fault the authors' lavish praise of TellMe (this is minor and not unexpected) and the examples in the reference section. The examples are quite good for someone learning VoiceXML, and the authors are commended for including them. The fault (albeit a minor one) is that they are fairly vanilla. So, while I would have preferred more examples, I concede that such examples would make the book much larger and the inclusion of "advanced" examples to the exclusion of "canonical" examples would have made them less useful to developers learning VoiceXML. Overall, if you are going to own one VoiceXML reference, THIS should be that one.
Most complete, well rounded book to dateReview Date: 2002-06-07
http://voicexmlplanet.com/reviews/vxmlbook.html
In short, this is the VoiceXML book I wish I had written. The authors have produced a comprehensive title that includes gems that could only have originated from masters of the craft.
My only complaint is that the book is a bit too biased towards Tellme (one of the authors is an employee), but this can be forgiven based on the quality and depth of the content.
My judgement is that this book is the most well rounded in-depth book on the topic that's been published to date. I am very happy with the mix of content, summaries of important concepts such as linguistics, speech recognition, and speech synthesis, as well as the in-your-face examples and complete reference. In fact, I liked it so much that I will probably be using it as a standard reference in my company's VoiceXML training course.
Use this book only as a reference not to learn VoiceXMLReview Date: 2003-02-26

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Still the best practical guide on the marketReview Date: 2007-06-11
Essential reading for the GA Instrument pilotReview Date: 2006-06-07
Recommeded to me by my instructor after I received my instrument rating I now recommend it to students and associates whenever the subject of flying in weather (or not flying in weather) comes up.
I read Northstar Over My Shoulder prior to buying this book so I had an understanding of Captain Buck's history and experience which added weight to the wisdom obvious in Weather Flying (buy that book too!)
Dealing with the weatherReview Date: 2005-10-22
Bob Buck is a man of authority, vast knowledge and experience when it comes to weather flying. His advice is, therefore, not to be taken lightly.
The book is readable, Buck writes "as he talks and flies, with an easy touch...he makes it simple and plain". The only thing that frustrated me at times was the fact that due to the sheer amount of information and knowledge he wants to impart, he occasionally jumps from one issue to the other, picking up new subjects while seemingly leaving others unfinished.
"The sky is my office"Review Date: 2005-06-30
The language of WEATHER FLYING is simple and straightforward. The lessons are practical more than theoretical, though Captain Buck keeps his readers briefed on essential weather theory as well. Virtually every weather situation that a pilot can encounter is covered in this book, from the ordinary to the exotic. Then Captain Buck instructs you how to fly it. The concept is simple and direct; the lessons are comprehensive and pragmatic.
In short, this is not a book to read once and then shelve. The lessons are too important to be forgotten. This is a manual to be taken down and read over and over again by any sort of pilot who flies any sort of aircraft.
Jeremy W. Forstadt
weather is confusing...Review Date: 2002-05-07

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Best book I've read so farReview Date: 2007-11-30
What Stops You? Overcome Self-Sabotage: Personal and ProfessionalReview Date: 2007-01-12
Nothing stops meReview Date: 2007-01-11
How to be Succesful!Review Date: 2006-11-25
Darlene BradenReview Date: 2006-10-20
You are not alone...This book will help you find exactly what is stopping you from success and why. It will help you
Conquer self-sabotage
Set your goals and reach them, for the first time in your life.
Lose weight for life
Make that important sale
Get a promotion
Make more money
What ever it is, you now have the power to make it happen. Darlene Braden's simple way of teaching is easy to understand and easy to apply to everyday life. Have the confidence to break free and live the life of your dreams!

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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

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The Diversity "One Book"Review Date: 2006-12-15
refreshing and logicalReview Date: 2006-11-09
A Key ResourceReview Date: 2006-11-09
Smart and PracticalReview Date: 2006-11-09
It's about time!Review Date: 2006-11-15

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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.
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This man is all about customer service...Bill Ford, READ THIS BOOK...Review Date: 2008-06-26
Good, yet lackingReview Date: 2008-02-18
The Reason Tasca is a Great ManagerReview Date: 2004-11-12
How to sell with integrity and without lowering your priceReview Date: 1999-09-08
When I first saw this book, I picked it up because the name was familiar, since I used to live in southeastern Massachusetts, and I wondered what Bob Tasca had to say. Now I know, and I feel that I got good value from the book. And that's his point, in part. But it's -his- book, so let -him- say it to you.
Would I buy a car from this man? You bet. (review from reading the hardcover edition)
A book that showed us what we should be doingReview Date: 1999-10-25

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A Motivation Masterpiece For Want to be Leaders!Review Date: 2008-06-16
John Halloran
CEO [...]
CEO [...]
Exciting ideas for leaders in the business worldReview Date: 2007-12-03
Great TipsReview Date: 2007-03-08
Must have book for all leadersReview Date: 2006-11-22
In a nutshellReview Date: 2006-10-15
Do not be confused by the fact that the book is not large. Steve has crammed years worth of fundamental truths about motivation and management into a compact tome.
The hardest part of using these techniques is making the initial leap of faith that these steps actually work. And they do work. If you buy a book on motivation or leadership this year, it must be this book.
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