| Build Your Own ASP.NET Website Using C# & VB.NET (Build Your Own)
Publisher: SitePoint Pty Ltd |
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| ISBN: 0957921861 List Price: $44.95 Amazon Price: $28.32 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Sitepoint ASP.NET A great learn-on-the-fly guide for server-side web development using Microsoft's popular web development technologies. A quick and easy read; will have you up-and-running ASP.NET websites on your own IIS web server (with a SQL Server backend!) in almost no time. Summary: Websites ? Do it yourself This is an excellent book for those who know computers and have some know how of using a programming language. It teaches one how to make a web site from start to end. Easy approach and simplicity, they have troed to keep things easy. Nice humor too. Worth buying. Deepak Sharma http://www.orientindia.biz Summary: Good for novice .net programmer This book gives a very good start for a novice .net programmer. The best thing about this book is that every example is given in C# and VB.NET Summary: |
| Homepage Usability: 50 Websites Deconstructed
Publisher: New Riders Press |
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| ISBN: 073571102X List Price: $39.99 Amazon Price: $25.19 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 2 Reviews: Summary: Nielson disappoints again Admittedly, I've been biased against Nielson's works since the publication of `Designing Web Usability' in 1999; finding his tendency to oversimplify and `deconstruct' rather ineffectual. And as usual, `Homepage Usability' disappoints as an overly sensational and inaccurate evaluation of homepage usability. There are good parts, in particular, the statistics you may want to reference for your own usability initiatives. But the `50 webpages deconstructed' portion is not much more than Nielson spewing hot air. If you learn (or are entertained) best through critique by an impossible standard and ideal, by all means, this book is for you. If you are looking for a USABLE and real life guide to homepage design, look elsewhere. Summary: Jakob Nielsen is a huge dork! I was forced to use this book for college in a "Website Admin" class. I think the first 53 pages make a good reference for web design but the rest of it is all about how fortune 500 companies have bad websites. Yahoo, Amazon, eBay, etc... come on now, these companies ARE the internet and this guy is "deconstructing" them and critisizing what they do wrong. Anyway, design is completely relative so use this as a guide only. By the way... pages 54 through 320 can be removed as far as i'm concerned. In other news... Nielsen is a huge dork and likes men. Summary: detailed critiques of major websites This book excels in giving detailed critiques of the home pages of 50 prominent websites. These include Microsoft, Barnes and Noble, Amazon, General Electric and Boeing. The websites span the gamut from appealing to a mass audience, like Amazon and MTV, to more specialised corporate sites like GE. The authors offer incisive comments. All the more valuable for not being always complimentary. They show how even a large company can have flaws in its home page. Take GE for example. Its page has a "Buy Online" section. But it is mostly misleading. The links in that section point to such items as aircraft, which you cannot buy online. The websites were captured several years ago. So it's quite possible that if you go to their current addresses, the pages are different. Yet the analysis in the book is still instructive. It should also be noted that the unusual shape of the book might be misleading. From the outside, it looks like a coffeetable type book. Full of glossy images. It does indeed have the latter. But these are high resolution screen captures that enhance the visual nature of the pages and their analyses. If you are designing your own website, try going first through this book, for inspiration. Summary: |
| Build Your Own Database Driven Website Using PHP & MySQL
Publisher: SitePoint |
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| ISBN: 0975240218 List Price: $39.95 Amazon Price: $25.17 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Excellent Book I highly recomend this book. I think it best serves those who already know the syntax of PHP, but it is a excellent book. I recomend either "Learning PHP" (The O'Reilly book) or "PHP for the World Wide Web : Visual QuickStart Guide" for a beginner. Both of these books will help you learn the syntax and concepts of PHP, but then it is best to move on to a book that gives practical examples, and this book excells at giving practical examples. Summary: A good book for getting started with php and databases. By reading just the first 4 chapters I was able to create my own webpages using php and the mySQL database to store tables of data. It has some good example programs that you can follow. Summary: Sitepoint PHP and MySQL Sitepoint (both the books and the website) is an excellent resource for quick learning of the latest and greatest in web development technologies, and this book proves it. Very clearly written and easy reading; a practical, hands-on tutorial. Provides everything necessary to develop and serve up a top-notch website backed by a powerful database. Summary: |
| Infants, Children, and Adolescents (with Interactive Companion Website) (4th Edition)
Publisher: Allyn & Bacon |
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| ISBN: 020533606X List Price: $108.40 Amazon Price: $108.40 Usually ships in 5 to 12 days |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Infants, Children, and Adolescents Hi, I love how the book divides the development of human beings by age, physical development, socio-emotional development, and cognitive development. I also love how the important words are highlighted. Summary: Review for Infants, Children, & Adolescents Good seller, quick delivery, could have put a better description about book on Web Summary: Book that tells a story I loved the way the author brought in stories of various children. I felt like I got to know the children throughout their stages of development. A great textbook! Summary: |
| Weaving a Website: Programming in HTML, Java Script, Perl and Java
Publisher: Prentice Hall |
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| ISBN: 0130282200 List Price: $77.00 Amazon Price: $69.27 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Its pretty good This book isn't horrible. The guy above obviously is an ex-lover of the author and is none to happy. The book has excellent examples and walks through the basics of HTML, JavaScript, JAVA, and perl. After you have learned the languages it is awesome for using as a reference and refresher. Summary: Fantastic book An absolutely amazing resource!! I took an html class, and this was the book that got me through it. The examples are interesting and clever. She's also very friendly if you ever try to e-mail her with questions. Summary: From a former student I'm a former student of Dr. Anderson-Freed and I am currently a professional web developer. I have seen this book in two classes on web programming, the first time in a draft form and the second time in its current form. Having seen the errors and typos in the draft, and having pointed them out during class, I had hoped that the final print of the book would contain at least some of the corrections. Unfortunately, as another reviewer has pointed out, the book still contains numerous errors, typos, and just plain incorrect programming. I still own a copy of her book because I have penned in corrections to many of the errors in the book. It covers a little bit of everything, and the little bit of reference I need for Perl and Java are met by this book and web references. However, I also currently own and recommend the HTML 4 Bible and JavaScript Bible, both published by IDG Books. I would recommend the Bible series of computer books over Dr. Anderson-Freed's book to anyone who requires a web-related programming reference. The same goes for IWU students who are taking her classes: don't buy this book. While her book contains many examples (many of which she uses in class), a good portion of her examples have code that does not produce the desired results. You would be better off reading another text and recreating the examples on your own. Summary: |
| Constructing Accessible Web Sites
Publisher: Peer Information Inc. |
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| ISBN: 1904151000 List Price: $49.99 Amazon Price: This item is currently not available. |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Guiding hand to accessibility The GlassHaus "Constructing Accessible Web Sites" book has been a great find. I began working to build sites and applications for use in Web browsers that had to be used by individuals with disabilities in 1997. Over these years I picked up a lot of hard won knowledge and experience, but have never run across a resource that fully backed what I had gathered. The GlasHaus Accessibility book not only echoes what I have learned, but has provided new insights to improve upon what I already have. The best part of this book is that I can point others to it and I am assured they will be able to build an accessible site or Web applications that can meet high standards. Many folks think accessibility is a great inconvenience, but it takes a little thinking and planning to do it right from the beginning. Having a great resource at hand makes the process a cake walk. Not only are the processes and guides helpful for creating sites that are accessible for those that are disabled these steps outlined also make the information in the site future ready. Sites that are accessible are much easier to use with a handheld PDA device or from even a cell phone browser. Accessibility for everybody in more situations improves with structuring the information properly, which is all making Web enabled information really requires to get it ready to be consumed. Is your information ready to be consumed by everybody? Summary: Guiding hand to accessibility The GlassHaus "Constructing Accessible Web Sites" book has been a great find. I began working to build sites and applications for use in Web browsers that had to be used by individuals with disabilities in 1997. Over these years I picked up a lot of hard won knowledge and experience, but have never run across a resource that fully backed what I had gathered. The GlasHaus Accessibility book not only echoes what I have learned, but has provided new insights to improve upon what I already have. The best part of this book is that I can point others to it and I am assured they will be able to build an accessible site or Web applications that can meet high standards. Many folks think accessibility is a great inconvenience, but it takes a little thinking and planning to do it right from the beginning. Having a great resource at hand makes the process a cake walk. Not only are the processes and guides helpful for creating sites that are accessible for those that are disabled these steps outlined also make the information in the site future ready. Sites that are accessible are much easier to use with a handheld PDA device or from even a cell phone browser. Accessibility for everybody in more situations improves with structuring the information properly, which is all making Web enabled information really requires to get it ready to be consumed. Is your information ready to be consumed by everybody? Summary: No More Excuses. Two new words have joined the vocabulary of web designers in recent years - usability and accessibility. You will often come across them used in tandem. Usability really became an issue when Jacob Nielsen infamously denounced Flash as 99% bad. Accessibility became a priority for web developers working on government projects after Section 508 was brought into law in the United States. Accessibility became an issue in Australia during Maguire vs SOCOG in 1999, when a blind man filed a complaint with the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) that neither Olympic Games tickets purchasing information nor the souvenir programme were available in Braille. Most importantly he alleged that the SOCOG website was not accessible, and to make it so would have been well within budget. SOCOG was found to have discriminated against the complainant and damages were awarded against the organization. Accessibility is now a civil rights issue. It is also not that difficult to implement on a website, once you learn how it can be done. This excellent book, Constructing Accessible Web Sites, teaches you all that and more. It is the first on its subject, and will not be the last, but it is damned a good beginning. All eight co-authors have been pioneers in the field of accessibility, and Glasshaus deserves praise for having assembled such a team. They cover more than website accessibility - their expertise extends to the accessibility of web design tools themselves. An apt reminder that the web is as much about reading as writing, for writers as much as readers, a real medium of two-way communication. All websites can now be made accessible to varying degrees, even Flash websites since Flash MX, as Macromedia Senior Product Manager for Accessibility Bob Regan demonstrates in Chapter 10. So there are no excuses for failing to add increased accessibility, and usability for that matter, to that new project you are just about to commence. Ensure you have a copy of Constructing Accessible Web Sites at hand when you begin. And also take a look at another equally essential reference on the subject due out any day now, Joe Clark's Building Accessible Websites. Accessibility is the newest and most necessary website building skill. There are no excuses now. Summary: |
| Infants and Children: Prenatal through Middle Childhood (With Interactive Companion Website) (4th Edition)
Publisher: Allyn & Bacon |
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| ISBN: 0205337384 List Price: $79.80 Amazon Price: This item is currently not available. |
Avg Cusomer Rating: Reviews: Summary: |
| User-Centered Website Development: A Human-Computer Interaction Approach
Publisher: Prentice Hall |
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| ISBN: 0130411612 List Price: $55.00 Amazon Price: $55.00 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 2 Reviews: Summary: Not worth the price When I first bought this book, I expected to get more out of it in terms of designing web pages with users in mind. It focused a lot on setting up testing centers with a paper system and getting feedback from users. It was very brief on good web design techniques (doesn't cover navigation enough). The hands on exercises leaves something to be desired. Although there were some good ideas in this book, I found myself "hanging" at the end as if there should have been much more. Summary: Best HCI /Usability Textbook for Web Design I use this book in the classroom to teach the web usability component of a combo HCI/web design course. It has many examples, contains review questions that are reasonable for students to use, and is very clear and precise. The color plates are the best I've seen in a book of this type. I highly recommend this. Because it is so clear and concrete, undergraduate students can quickly grasp the material. Further, the authors responded quickly to a question I had. Everything you need is here, from foundational concepts rooted in cognitive psychology, to complex social/technology issues like privacy and globalization. And of course, guidelines for working with colors, and fonts. The book draws on Gestalt psychology and Constructivism to discuss layout, placement and visual hierarchy. If you teach HCI, consider this. Summary: Only instructors will get the full value of this book Until it was finally in my hands, I wondered why this book had not received much reviewer attention, given its solid content and authorship. Keys to understanding that at once became obvious: 1) The book is much more expensive than books with similar content. 2) The eloquent Jared Spool, listed as an author, provided only a short preface. 3) The book was designed as a college textbook. Who loves or hates a textbook enough to bother to review it? As a classroom aid, the book is superb. Usability principles are presented from foundations to applications clearly and without padding. Unlike many usability texts, statements are backed with ample references. The color illustrations lighten the book sufficiently to soften any textbooky stigma. Each chapter ended with review questions and exercises. Some of them were very interesting and creative, but if you are not in a classroom with an instructor who has access to the password-protected answers, you are on your own. So the Web professional attracted to the material and learning on his own will inevitably feel a bit cheated out of the full value of the book. Summary: |
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