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Time Management for System Administrators contains useful advice for SysAdmins looking to use their time more effectively. If you are a techie who wonders why you get bogged down with little tasks while not getting your projects done, this is the book for you. If you don't have the time to read this book, you definitely need to read it. [Comments are disabled]
AppleScript: The Definitive Guide most certainly is a definitive guide, with an awful lot of information about anything and everything you could possibly want to know about AppleScript. The problem is that the nuggets of useful information are often hidden deep within either complicated examples revolving around expensive specialist software, or in amongst extremely detailed in-depth examinations of the underlying processes running AppleScript. Although interesting to some, this will be a little daunting to the average programmer attracted to AppleScript. However, the book is definitely an excellent reference for existing AppleScript programmers, those who have some previous knowledge in programming, or those interested in MacOS X technology. [Comments are disabled]
As the title of the book suggests, this isn't about GNU/Linux. It's not about the GNU programs that come with the Debian distribution. Instead, the book with its 600 pages (including a Debian Sarge DVD) is fully loaded. Martin F. Krafft, an active Debian developer, goes to great lengths to describe the interplay of Debian's tools and the project's philosophy. [Comments are disabled]
I have been interested in practical software process improvement initiatives for a number of years now, and I stress the word practical. The world of theory is fine, but what most people want is help and advice based in the real world, the world where companies, projects, teams, people, and processes are not perfect. [Comments are disabled]
At $14.95 CDN (approximately $10.00 U.S.), SQL in Easy Steps is very reasonably priced for a computer book. If you're anything like me, you probably have quite a few doorstop-sized books for which you paid a fortune only to read once. It's a refreshing change to find a book that doesn't cost so much. That said, the low price does come at a cost that users new to SQL/MySQL may not want to pay: gaping holes in content. [Comments are disabled]
Books on Artificial Intelligence (AI) have to walk a line between being too scholarly and too fluffy. Some books are very academic, with lots of formulas and symbols and a dearth of practical applications. Others are high-level, with much visionary hand-waving but no code. M. Tim Jones' book manages to maintain a nice balance between these extremes. [Comments are disabled]
I first met this book at a bioinformatics course I attended at NCSU last year. I've been reading books on bioinformatics since 1997, and I was a little skeptical about this one. I thought it was "just another bioinformatics book". I was wrong. It has some really outstanding features I'd like to highlight. [Comments are disabled]
I first read "Peopleware..." in the late 80s while working at a struggling vibration analysis company that was mightily attempting to create chaos out of order. The management was affronted by the book (I had stupidly lent a copy to the V.P. of engineering) and I only retrieved it when I proved that it was a public library book. At the time, I was excited by its approach and readability, and I greatly enjoyed reading it and sharing it with my downtrodden peers. [Comments are disabled]
Some of you may know me, either by name or by my work with FreeBSD. I will bet that even more of you are familiar with Michael Lucas and his widely-read and highly-regarded articles at OnLamp. It should come as no surprise to those people that he has written a very good book on FreeBSD. "Absolute BSD" came out in July 2002 and has proven to be a great resource for people new to BSD and those who have been using it for years. Michael Lucas has a writing style which is very easy to read and absorb. [Comments are disabled]
Richard Blum's Open Source E-mail Security is poorly organized, rarely topical, and betrays the author's fundamental failure to understand the topic at hand. While some of the underlying technical material is useful and relevant, the author seldom supplies the details needed to proceed to a general understanding. [Comments are disabled]
Maximum Linux Security's author is clearly ignorant of cryptographer Bruce Schneier's claim that "Security is a process, not a product." At its best, this book is a catalogue of useful security tools. However, very little context is provided for these tools. There is no discussion of particular vulnerabilities and how they are exploited, of network architecture and the difficulties inherent in TCP/IP networking, or of application-level problems. [Comments are disabled]
Linux Routers is a quirky, very personal look at implementing TCP/IP networks using Linux servers by an obvious master of the field. Despite the book's subtitle, however, this book is much better suited for Linux system administrators thrown into the world of network administration than it is for network administrators who are looking to save money on hardware costs by moving to Linux. [Comments are disabled]
I've been using Beowulfs for a while now and have seen a number of tutorials, articles, and books on how to go about building a Beowulf cluster or writing programs for a Beowulf cluster. However, when it comes to job scheduling or cluster monitoring, the topic is usually relegated to a small paragraph (or even a few lines) mentioning that using a job scheduling package such as PBS makes one's life easier. I can say from experience that such a statement is very true, but I haven't seen many mainstream articles on implementing a job scheduler or methods and techniques for measuring cluster performance. If you've ever been interested in the implementation of a job scheduling and performance measuring system, "Linux Cluster Architecture" by Alex Vrenios is just what you (and I) have been looking for. [Comments are disabled]
In "The Career Programmer", Christopher Duncan provides a very understandable, cogent summary of solid project management principles for technical projects. He also gives quite a few real world examples of how projects can go awry. However, his style alienates the audience that would benefit most from his message: Management. [Comments are disabled]
"XML and PHP" is designed to teach you just one thing: How to use PHP to create XML-based applications. Unlike some of the heavier books out there, it does not attempt to cover every single PHP function; rather, it zooms in on the XML API built into PHP and illustrates, with some well-thought-out examples, how they can be applied to different situations. [Comments are disabled]
Curl is an attempt to replace HTML, JavaScript, Java, and Flash with a single easy-to-learn language platform. Since I am a computer language junkie, it didn't take much convincing to get me to try Curl. To dive into new technology, I like to quickly devour a book on the subject, and, fortunately, there was one available. It proved to be sufficient for the task, despite some shortcomings. [Comments are disabled]
Pekka Himanen's "The Hacker Ethic" is an intriguing, if ultimately disappointing, book. It suffers from being both unsure of its audience and overly broad in its claims. [Comments are disabled]
Zope is perhaps the best known of the Python Web publishing frameworks. It includes its own Web server (though you can run it behind Apache or IIS, for example), FTP server, and ACID-compliant object database. There is more to it than that, but that's Zope in a nutshell. [Comments are disabled]
Musicians aren't always technically inclined. When they look for music software to run on their computers, they're apt to buy something for the Windows system they already have or believe the advice that anything artistic is supposed to be done on a Mac. Linux systems provide cheap and powerful alternatives, and this book tells you how to get started with them. [Comments are disabled]
Many Ruby programmers learned the language from Andrew Hunt and Dave Thomas's excellent "Programming Ruby: The Pragmatic Programmer's Guide". For over a year, it was the only English language Ruby book available. Now, Hal Fulton's "The Ruby Way" comes at just the right time for those of us ready to move up to the next level. [Comments are disabled]
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