The Definitive Guide to Enterprise Manageability eBook
Grok Headline matches for The Definitive Guide to Enterprise Manageability eBook
Definitive guide to C# at 30% off
Definitive guide to C# at 30% off
04/20/2004 07:23 AMSite Offer And there's more...
The Definitive Guide to MySQL, 2nd Ed.
The Definitive Guide to MySQL, 2nd Ed.
12/17/2004 06:35 PM"The book has four sections: Introduction, Fundamentals, Programming
and Reference. The Introduction begins with a brief introduction to
databases, relational databases, ANSI 92, and how MySQL fits in to
each of these. It also touches on the licensing for MySQL (commercial
vs. non-commercial usage) and a version roadmap for past and future
releases of MySQL. The roadmap is very helpful to know what features
are present in the version of MySQL you may be using (or are planned
for an upcoming
The Definitive warchalking guide?
The Definitive warchalking guide?
10/29/2003 12:10 AMHow about someones takes all the most up to date warchalking symbols
and compiles them into 1 .pdf? I'm not sure if someone has done this,
but if they have, I can't find it.
DocBook The Definitive Guide 2.0.10
DocBook The Definitive Guide 2.0.10
05/20/2004 10:11 AMDocBook stylesheets, schemas, documentation, and resources.
AppleScript - the Definitive Guide
AppleScript - the Definitive Guide
01/30/2004 06:07 PMAppleScript Gets a Truly Definitive
Guide
AppleScript Gets a Truly Definitive
Guide
12/09/2003 12:09 PMMatt Neuberg: "Which brings us to my latest book, AppleScript: The
Definitive Guide, published by O'Reilly & Associates. AppleScript is a
fairly small language, but I was amazed by how difficult it was to
write this book! It took more than twice as long as I'd expected. My
approach, as readers of my Frontier and REALbasic books know, is not
to rely on documentation, but to bang away at the language itself,
testing and experimenting, trying to deduce the underlying rules."
The Definitive Guide to the Compact
Framework
The Definitive Guide to the Compact
Framework
12/02/2003 01:27 AMReview - HTML and XHTML, The Definitive
Guide
Review - HTML and XHTML, The Definitive
Guide
01/09/2003 12:28 PMWebmasterBase Jan 9 2003 10:27AM ET
Book Review: Postfix: The Definitive
Guide
Book Review: Postfix: The Definitive
Guide
06/25/2004 05:33 AMA well-written guide that explains how Postfix's features reflect its
design and what they can do for your system.
Blog Entry: AppleScript: The Definitive
Guide
Blog Entry: AppleScript: The Definitive
Guide
01/16/2004 10:59 AMGar Burd: "I was very frustrated when I wrote a web page export script
in AppleScript last year. I could not understand why some things
worked and other things did not. I could not find any books or
documentation that described what was going on in the language.
AppleScript was very mysterious to me."
Review HTML and XHTML, The Definitive
Guide
Review HTML and XHTML, The Definitive
Guide
01/06/2003 01:22 AMWebmasterBase Jan 6 2003 0:05AM ET
Book Review: AppleScript - The
Definitive Guide by Matt Neuburg
Book Review: AppleScript - The
Definitive Guide by Matt Neuburg
09/04/2004 10:38 AMThe book is not for those looking for a quick and easy entry point
into AppleScript programming. However, if you are a serious student or
have grounding in other programming languages, it will be hard to find
a better guidebook. Unlike Apple's own documentation, Neuburg provides
an honest, unprejudiced appraisal of AppleScript's strengths and
weaknesses and offers expert guidance in working with and around them.
O'Reilly Releases "SSH, The Secure
Shell: The Definitive Guide, Second
Edition"
O'Reilly Releases "SSH, The Secure
Shell: The Definitive Guide, Second
Edition"
06/17/2005 03:37 PMReview: Start to Finish Guide to
Becoming a Consultant ebook
Review: Start to Finish Guide to
Becoming a Consultant ebook
02/10/2004 02:50 AMWeb Search Garage – The Definitive Guide
on How to Best Search the Internet
Web Search Garage – The Definitive Guide
on How to Best Search the Internet
09/08/2004 03:43 AMTara Calishain, co-author of “Popular Google Hacks” shares her
techniques for masterful navigation of the increasingly complex
Internet in her new book. [PRWEB Sep 8, 2004]
Ebook Rebranding - The New Ebook
Marketing Power?
Ebook Rebranding - The New Ebook
Marketing Power?
05/24/2004 01:30 AMWebDevInfo May 24 2004 5:50AM GMT
Guide to Enterprise Storage
Guide to Enterprise Storage
01/05/2004 03:38 AMCNET Jan 5 2004 3:09AM ET
A Basic Guide To Enterprise Application
Distribution
A Basic Guide To Enterprise Application
Distribution
06/09/2004 01:13 AMManaging Mac OS X on hundreds of diverse computers throughout an
enterprise organization creates many challenges for IT managers and
staff. As an enterprise system administrator, it's important to
evaluate the factors for distributioin and deployment of software by
tracking installations.
By Philip Rinehart, O'Reilly Network (via MyAppleMenu)
Altiris Intuitive > Manageability
Newsletter - July 2002
Altiris Intuitive > Manageability
Newsletter - July 2002
09/09/2004 02:45 PMSageTV 2.0, The Definitive PVR
Application
SageTV 2.0, The Definitive PVR
Application
05/17/2004 11:51 AMThe definitive Ray Davies interview
The definitive Ray Davies interview
11/13/2003 11:14 AM The
definitive Ray Davies interview by Candy Darling, Tinkerbelle and
Glenn O'Brien
Tinkerbelle: You've probably made a lot of
money. Do you ever get carried away with the material side?
Ray: I'm not wealthy. I never made that much. You probably don't want
to talk to me now.
Candy: People really are more interesting when they're rich sometimes.
You just can't help but like them better. Do you feel that way? "Mac OS X 10.3 - the definitive Panther
review"
"Mac OS X 10.3 - the definitive Panther
review"
11/11/2003 03:37 AMMac OS X 10.3 the
definitive Panther review
Mac OS X 10.3 the
definitive Panther review
11/10/2003 11:12 PMArs Technica's Apple Technology Expert John Siracusa is back with one
of his trademarked reviews, this time covering Panther
"Definitive Solution to Image
Replacement"
"Definitive Solution to Image
Replacement"
04/12/2005 04:13 PMNew Book: Definitive XML Application
Development
New Book: Definitive XML Application
Development
06/26/2002 01:00 PMPrentice Hall has released Definitive XML Application Development, by
Lars Marius Garshol. The book details application development that
uses XML, focusing on Python in most of the examples.
The Definitive Episode 3 Spoiler
Synopsis
The Definitive Episode 3 Spoiler
Synopsis
12/10/2003 01:59 PMO'Reilly releases 'AppleScript: The
Definitive Guide'
O'Reilly releases 'AppleScript: The
Definitive Guide'
12/10/2003 05:32 PMO'Reilly has announced the release of "AppleScript: The Definitive
Guide" (US$39.95), a new book by Matt Neuburg that "not only teaches
how the AppleScript language works, but shows readers how to use it in
all sorts of contexts -- in everyday scripts to process automation, as
well as in AppleScript Studio, in Cocoa, in CGI scripts, and in
combination with Perl and Ruby.....
O'Reilly offers 'AppleScript: The
Definitive Guide'
O'Reilly offers 'AppleScript: The
Definitive Guide'
12/10/2003 05:25 PMTechnical publisher
O'Reilly &
Associates has released "AppleScript: The Definitive Guide," a new
book by Matt Neuburg that explains "the how, where and why of using
AppleScript."
Did you know that the Frankfurt eBook
Did you know that the Frankfurt eBook
08/28/2004 02:47 PMTechTree Aug 28 2004 5:39PM GMT
Just In Tokyo ebook
Just In Tokyo ebook
03/06/2004 01:53 AMThis week's featured content is the ebook Just
In Tokyo. It's a offbeat guidebook to Tokyo written by web veteran
Justin Hall and is now available for download under a Creative Commons
license. First printed a few years go, it's now out of print and
Justin is asking for voluntary donations if you like the downloadable
book.
Vive la ebook!
Vive la ebook!
07/31/2004 05:02 PMTechTree Jul 31 2004 8:40PM GMT
What Will It Take For eBook Adoption?
What Will It Take For eBook Adoption?
07/29/2004 10:24 AMDeleting an Ebook
Deleting an Ebook
02/17/2004 06:32 PMMy new Entourage Ebook
My new Entourage Ebook
06/13/2004 07:57 PMI'm pleased to announce the publication and availability for sale of
my new ebook, Take Control of What's New in...
The AdSense Secrets eBook
The AdSense Secrets eBook
03/17/2005 03:40 AM
p style=color: redThis entry was brought to you by a
href=http://go.lockergnome.com/527Google AdSense/a/p
p
There's an a href=http://go.lockergnome.com/527AdSense eBook/a
out there that speaks the plain ol' truth, although its value is
underestimated. I personally would have sold it for 10x as much, but
that's because I know if you read it, you'll make 100x as much with a
href=http://go.lockergnome.com/527AdSense/a as you are today. I've got
a few more ideas I'm kicking around, including doing an AdSense
afternoon seminar up here in Seattle. I'll keep you posted. Until
then, read the eBook:
/p
blockquote
p
This is a real, recent screenshot of my a
href=http://go.lockergnome.com/527AdSense stats page/a. With Google's
permission, I'm able to reveal how much I'm making with AdSense. But
they've asked me to keep details of my CPM and CTR private, so I have
blacked them out in order to comply with Google's terms of service.
I'm not a renegade and I value my relationship with Google too much!
/p
/blockquote
p
And if you haven't yet signed up for Google AdSense yet, get
going - a href=http://go.lockergnome.com/529sign up for Google AdSense
now/a.
/p
Audio Ebook Project
Audio Ebook Project
06/17/2005 07:17 PMI’m still pulling together an announcement so I don’t
have a detailed write-up yet, but I wanted to note that I’m
putting together the-most-incredible-offer-ever for audio ebooks for
Illinois libraries (not just MLS libraries). It’s one of
the other Really Big Projects I’m working on right
now.
If you’re thinking about signing a contract for
digital audiobooks, DON’T commit to anything until you hear this
offer. If you’re dying for more info, call or
email me at MLS, but I should have some info up here soon. I
promise you won’t find a better deal anywhere else!
New ebook provides help with AirPort
networks
New ebook provides help with AirPort
networks
07/09/2004 10:15 AM"Take Control of Your AirPort Network" is a new US$5 ebook that aims
to help Mac users who are trying to install or improve their AirPort
wireless network...
Ebook column that gets it all wrong
Ebook column that gets it all wrong
07/29/2004 02:52 AMGizmodo has a new column called "Feature Creep," and they kicked it
off with an editorial about the future of ebooks that is striking for
its complete disregard for the actual marketplace experiences with
ebooks. It's full of hoary chestnuts about ebooks that have been
emptily mouthed for 10 years ("Call it digital paper or electronic
ink, it's the future of eBooks.") and aside from the occassional iPod
comparison, there's hardly a paragraph in there that couldn't have
been written in 1997 -- nor one that takes note of any of the events
since then (well, to be fair, there's also a lot of puffery stuck in
there to promote an ebook company called Vertical that probably didn't
exist in 1997, but that's beside the point).
Take DRM. The author asserts on the one hand that DRM can work, and
that it won't be so invasive that it turns customers (which the author
insists on calling "consumers," an odious buzzword that invokes
Gibson's description in Idoru, "...a vicious, lazy, profoundly
ignorant, perpetually hungry organism craving the warm god-flesh of
the anointed. Personally I like to imagine something the size of a
baby hippo, the color of a week-old boiled potato, that lives by
itself, in the dark, in a double-wide on the outskirts of Topeka. It's
covered
with eyes and it sweats constantly. The sweat runs into those eyes and
makes them sting. It has no mouth, Laney, no genitals, and can only
express its mute extremes of murderous rage and infantile desire by
changing the channels on a universal remote. Or by voting in
presidential elections.") off.
This despite the actual marketplace fact that all DRM becomes invasive
(ask any copyright policy maker in a country that allows parallel
importing how he feels about the "lightweight" region-coding DRM on
DVDs that reverses the laws he was elected to enact).
This despite the actual marketplace fact that DRM is generally broken
within a few days of engagement with the public, often by teenagers,
grad students, or people with ready acccess to sophisticated
DRM-cracking tools like Google and the sinister Shift key (for more on
DRM, see my DRM talk)
But the author goes further and asserts that without DRM, there will
be no market for entertainment product ever again ("If publishers stop
wanting DRM, it's the end of popular creative arts. Not as we know
them, but period.") despite the fact that the software industry got
bigger when it abandoned DRM, and despite the fact that no
new medium has ever succeeded by appealing to the virtues of the
medium before it (there're very few ideas more goofy than the idea
that people will start buying ebooks just as soon as they have fewer
features and more restrictions, provided that the ebooks can be played
back on special-purpose devices with sharp screens). He cites Sony as
proof of this ("Sony may be nuts, but they're not that nuts."),
despite the fact that Sony was forced out of the walkman market by its
failure to deliver the DRM-free devices that its customers demanded.
Yes, Sony is that nuts.
He doesn't even touch on the marketplace experience of every published
writer who's tried giving away DRM-free ebooks -- me, Lessig, Jim
Munroe, the Baen authors, Orson Scott Card -- universally, the
experience is that we sell more books (Lessig's latest just went into
its third hardcover printing, for chrissakes). This of course echoes
the experiences from elsewhere: the movie studios' box office revenues
appear to be increasing as a function of the amount of movies being
shared on P2P nets and the only quantitative study of music
downloading and music sales concluded that the effect was usually
neegligible, rarely negative, and sometimes positive.
He does, however, take time out to snidely dismiss blanket licensing
schemes -- like the ones that enable radio, live performance, covers,
lending, coursepacks, jukeboxes, rentals, etc etc etc all over the
world -- as a kind of pipe dream ("When the visionary of all
visionaries develops a model for all-you-can-eat media consumption
that provides for the artists to actually eat, perhaps I'll change my
mind; until then, we are what we are, and we'll have to play nice
within the confines of the present system.") despite the fact that
these systems have been employed to universal good effect whenever new
technology makes exclusion too costly to work effectively. It's like
he's totally missed the fact that trillions of dollars go right into
the pockets of creators and rights-holders through these schemes.
Bizarrely, he asserts that people might buy periodicals that expire
off their players in 60 days -- despite the fact that every one of us
has a friend or relative with a giant stack of old computer mags, or
National Geographics, or colorful Wireds, sitting on a shelf.
Really, it's as though he sat down and called an ebook startup's PR
guy, then reasoned out all of his conclusions a priori,
without reference to any of the activity in the field.
I believe fiercely and passionately in ebooks -- that's why I give
talks like this one --
but articles like this do nothing to advance the discussion. They're
echoes of the dotcom snakeoil that dominated the ebook discussion five
or ten years ago, and it's a disappointment to see this kind of
editorial-in-defiance-of-facts on a hip net-zine like Gizmodo.
Link
Free Ebook For Your Website
Free Ebook For Your Website
03/14/2005 05:24 PMRoger Lee is the author of three poetry books, Poems of Praise,
Streams of Light and Christmas Poetry. The books are of the Christian
genre, reflecting God's grace being manifested in nature. As well as,
reflecting upon man's relationship with God. [PRWEB Mar 11, 2005]
Grok Description matches for The Definitive Guide to Enterprise Manageability eBook
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The Definitive Guide to Enterprise Manageability eBook