| The World Economy: Resources, Location, Trade and Development (4th Edition)
Publisher: Prentice Hall |
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| ISBN: 0131478044 List Price: $107.20 Amazon Price: $107.20 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 2 Reviews: Summary: First Draft Text Book, A Joke This book has so many obnoxious errors in it. Every thing from textual to printing to the index. Textual: The actual content keeps this book from being one star. It's not bad, not good, but not bad. Sort of drab, but it could be worse. There are, however, stylistic, grammatical, etc... errors in the text. They're infrequent, but present. Printing: The book is full of graphs and maps. However, time and again I come across a map where there is no shaded data in the regions. For example, the map will say the concentration of blah blah factories in the United States, with each state supposedly shaded differently. However, the printer forgot to add any colors to the map, so you get a blank map with no data. Index: Entries are listed twice a number of times. It doesn't hurt anything, but it's annoying. Now I work part time in textbook publishing for a small company, so I know some financial constraints, such as their usage of only blue as the book's highlight color. But books should be able to afford final reviewers and editors so they don't produce a book filled with errors. And is this really the fourth addition? To the book's credit, some of the graphs and examples are interesting and abnormal. I hate this book, but if you're a student, you're going to have to buy it. If you're faculty, try another Economic Geography book. Summary: |
| Chasing Spring: An American Journey Through a Changing Season
Publisher: Scribner |
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| ISBN: 0743262476 List Price: $24.00 Amazon Price: $15.60 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 4 Reviews: Summary: "Great car" Bruce Stutz is a 56 year old Jewish naturalist writer from Brooklyn who after a heart-valve surgery decides to drive across the USA following the progress of Spring, moving generally from south to north (map of route included). I was drawn to this because I have driven across the USA on solo trips with no particular itinerary just exploring and was interested in traveling with a like-minded soul and seeing it from another perspective. Some of the highlites of the trip include small town mardi gras celebrations in Louisiana, the Punxsutawney Phil groundhog day, a tour of the now-defunct Biosphere and its lone remaining tour-guide/guard, hiking the deserts of AZ, the sandhills of Nebraska underneath which lies the largest aquafier of water in North America, difficult climbing in the mountains near Denver, birding on the salt flats, mushroom picking in the OR Cascade Mountains with Asian pickers (a fascinating and new phenomenon to me), flying into the ANWAR in Alaska with bush pilots. Throughout Stutz emphasis es the nature of change not only of the season into Spring, but of the changing weather and climate of the planet and how this is effecting the natural world visably today. Never preachy, it is a gentle and beautiful road-trip in a gas-guzzling 1983 Chevy, appropriately nick-named "Moby Dick" for its large "whale" of a size, white color, and for anyone who has read the novel, a metaphor for the elements of life that are out of our control. A book well worth reading for anyone interested in travel, nature, a changing world and the promise of Spring around the corner on a winters evening. Summary: |
| The Linux Cookbook, Second Edition
Publisher: No Starch Press |
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| ISBN: 1593270313 List Price: $39.95 Amazon Price: $25.17 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 2 Reviews: Summary: Not for the fairly initiated I AM NOT A GEEK. That said, I'd have to say that this book fell short of providing me any really useful information. I've been a Linux user for about 5 years now, and I still find some aspects of it frustrating, but this book didn't really help me much. And, it certainly doesn't live up to the O'Reilley "Cookbook" series (not that it is pretending to be, just shares the name), which I always find helpful. There are numerous Linux books out there that are better than this one. To me, the hints provided don't help much. And, when I'm stumped about what's going on with my system, this book doesn't help either. If I were just starting out, maybe it would be OK. But I think I would probably spring for something else, "Unix Power Tools" comes to mind. Summary: Cookbook approach to working with Linux Let me start with what this book is and is not. There is nothing on how to install, troubleshoot, or administer Linux and it is not supposed to have that information. This is a cookbook and is designed to be a resource when you have a specific goal in mind and want to know how to get there. The first several chapters focus on the very basic Linux information that everyone working in the operating system should know. This includes such common items as how to determine what processes are running and how to determine who you are logged in as. Of course anyone with even a minimum of Linux experience knows this stuff. For the more experienced Linux users the later chapters deal are a real treasure. It includes things like viewing and editing images, PostScript, working with sound, and cross-platform conversions. The recipe style layout really works well. Like a list of ingredients the author lists the program to be run, package manager name for the installation package, and the home page where the package can be found. This is one of the really nice features of the book. If you are looking for how to accomplish a specific task you can look it up, see if there is a program to accomplish it, locate and install the program if necessary, and follow through the specific directions to achieve your desired result. The Linux Cookbook, 2nd Edition is very highly recommended for the new Linux user, and recommended as a desk reference to keep available for the more experienced user who may just need to know how to convert that mp3 file to another format and burn the result to a CD. Summary: Thorough Coverage When this book fell out of its shipping envelope, it made quite a thunk as it hit my desk. No wonder: at almost 800 pages, this is quite a chunk of reading material. I had been impressed by the first edition. The only real complaint I had about that was its exclusive focus on Debian Linux; that's been corrected here. The first edition was available on-line in its entirety; this is not, although you can see a sample chapter and the table of contents at (...). Unlike the first edition, this covers a lot more basic material. Don't let that turn you off if you have outgrown the beginner books - unless you are expert at everything, you'll find helpful material here. There are pointers to esoteric utilities you probably have never heard of mixed in with the "getting started" stuff. I was interested that Amazon reviews were luke-warm. I think it deserves better. I would have liked to see less attention to the real basics, but that does make this useful to the beginner also. One Amazon review didn't like it because it was too geeky, a complaint I can't sympathise with. Another didn't like the concentration on command line tools - I hope that isn't a sign of things to come where Linux users join their Windows brethren in disdain of character based interfaces. Summary: |
| Easy & Elegant Lone Star Quilts: All the Wow Without the Work!
Publisher: C&T Publishing |
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| ISBN: 1571202889 List Price: $24.95 Amazon Price: $15.72 Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Great Book I have met this author and seen her quilts. Templates in book are very useful. Summary: |
| Shared Source CLI Essentials
Publisher: O'Reilly Media |
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| ISBN: 059600351X List Price: $34.95 Amazon Price: $23.07 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 3 Reviews: Summary: Book title and amazon.com description are not accurate The editorial description makes more claims that what the book deals with. Following are the excerpts from the book description at Amazon.com: >> Microsoft's Shared Source CLI (code-named "Rotor") is the implementation of the ECMA Common Language Infrastructure (CLI) and the ECMA C# language specification. Above implies: (Shared Source CLI) = (Rotor) = (ECMA CLI + C#) >> [The book] is a companion guide to Rotor's code. [It] provides a road map for anyone wishing to navigate, understand, or alter the [Rotor] code. The book declares in the introduction that it does not cover several components of Rotor. The run-time engine is covered, but the compiler (C#) part is not. That is less that half of what was claimed. I correspondingly give 3/5 to the book. I was interested more in the C# compiler part. Summary: Best source for .NET implementation details This book is the best and most concentrated source of information I've found for understanding how the .NET CLR is implemented (comparable only to Chris Brumme's blog). Even if you never actually build the SSCLI, this book combined with the SSCLI source code can provide a solid understanding of what's going on behind the scenes in the commercial CLR. I have found this level of understanding to be absolutely necessary in understanding and diagnosing some types of unusual behaviour or performance characteristics of .NET. If you're not using the SSCLI on a UNIX machine and have a solid understanding of the Win32 API, you can probably safely skip the last chapter on the PAL as it is somewhat anti-climatic. However, coming from a UNIX programming background myself, I found it to be of value in solidifying my understanding of Win32 specific functionality (eg. structured exception handling) and how its used by the SSCLI. Obviously this book is a must-read for anyone that is actually experimenting with the SSCLI, but I also consider it essential for anyone that wants to fully understand how the commercial version of .NET works. Summary: better than a five knuckle shuffle Well, there I was sitting on my bed with my new book. I opened the first page and didn't surface again for 9 days; it's that good i read it cover to cover, twice! I found it not only intellectually exciting, but also quite arousing; the way they talk about managed code gave me a right chubby one! Summary: |
| Theories for Everything: An Illustrated History of Science
Publisher: National Geographic |
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| ISBN: 0792239121 List Price: $40.00 Amazon Price: $25.20 Not yet published |
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| The Call of the Wild (Pacemaker Classics)
Publisher: Rebound by Sagebrush |
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| ISBN: 0785795197 List Price: $16.40 Amazon Price: $16.40 Usually ships in 5 to 8 weeks |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 4 Reviews: Summary: Good for all ages I read it when one of my kids had to read it. A great story and brings up a lot of American history for teaching and learning (about the Gold Rush). Summary: Call of the Wild The Call of the Wild The book called The Call of the Wild is a book that takes place in the north Yukon where Buck (the dog) and John live at that time. After a while when Buck and John matured they started entering the dog sledding races and winning them all. Then Buck got in a fight with the leader of the dog pack. While Sprits went for help, Buck started defending him self from this. The leader couldn't last any more so he ran away. After that they got back to the race. The story is written in first person point of view. When I was starting to read this book it felt strange and boring, because it is a book about a dog and not a person. I disliked the book at the beginning because it is boring to me, but then towards the ending the book started to be more fun and exciting for me. If you love animals or book with dogs you will totally love this book. I rate this book 4 out of 5 stars just because it is written and revolves around a dog instead a person. Summary: buck went on a long journey. Call of the wild is a great adventure book to read. The book is based on true story about a team of huskies. The book has alot detal in it you'll find the book is interesting and it is touching. When you get to the middle it is kind of confusing to others. I think you will like this book alot. Summary: |
| Nice Girls DO Get The Sale: Relationship Building That Gets Results
Publisher: Sourcebooks, Inc. |
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| ISBN: 1402207441 List Price: $14.95 Amazon Price: $9.72 Not yet published |
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