|
JAVA BOOKS
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by James Goodwill and Bryan Morgan. By Sams.
The regular list price is $44.99.
Sells new for $5.39.
There are some available for $4.00.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Developing Java Servlets (2nd Edition) (Sams White Book).
- I was pleased to learn so quickly about server-side Java. This book is called servlets but also handles interesting topics like JSP, RMI and Corba. Those topics are very brief, though. Otherwise this book would have been ten times the size.
It does have mistakes that only attentive readers might catch. It was a bit annoying that all these re-usable components were explained, Chpater 4 about the HTML Objects could be completely skipped without harm. A CD-rom containing this code could be handy. Perhaps they can do so when re-printing. I quickly learned to make servlets so it's a good book for it. It does require you to have some expertise in Java, but if you want to write servlets then you should already have that.
- I was pleased to learn so quickly about server-side Java. This book is called servlets but also handles interesting topics like JSP, RMI and Corba. Those topics are very brief, though. Otherwise this book would have been ten times the size.
It does have mistakes that only attentive readers might catch. It was a bit annoying that all these re-usable components were explained, Chpater 4 about the HTML Objects could be completely skipped without harm. A CD-rom containing this code could be handy. Perhaps they can do so when re-printing. I quickly learned to make servlets so it's a good book for it. It does require you to have some expertise in Java, but if you want to write servlets then you should already have that.
- This book is well put together, and is a good reference for Servlets and JSPs. The first edition was a bit outdated and irrelevant, so this book is much appreciated. The source code is still not up on the publisher'ssite... .
- Hi,
This is great book if you want to learn Java Servlet API. If you have little bit experience in Java then this is the best book to start with Servlets.Thanks,
- I have 5 books about Servlets and/or JSP's including the disapointed JavaServerPages and Java Servlet Programming both from o'reilly.
This is the best of all, all you need to know is Java, that's all. If you need to develop a Servlet project this book puts you on the road in the first 130 pages. Then if you want to have a better understanding you can read the rest of the book. The book has 24 chapters and 7 apendix and each chapter covers a topic in a very easy and comprehensive way with out confusing references like the o'reilly books that make you feel stupid. More over this book has three complete JSP examples so well written that you can use part of the code for your own projects.
Read more...
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by Carlton Egremont. By Addison-Wesley Professional.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $8.89.
There are some available for $0.01.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Mr. Bunny's Big Cup O'Java (Mr. Bunny Series).
- A complete waste. No learning or humor. There's barely enough material for a magazine article let alone a book. Now, after trashing the book, I'll see if I can find a sucker who doesn't read reviews to re-sell this book to.
- I don't get the negative reviews. Well, whatever. This is pure, hilarious, brilliant, hurts-when-you-laugh from a guy who knows his Java. Don't expect to learn anything about Java. It's just a stream of great injokes. Includes enormous curly braces, examples of white space, meeting "the primitives", explaining interfaces with a guy who's the mayor and a sheriff and a painter and a whole bunch of other things. And the illustrations are hilarious for anyone who's suffered through too many life cycle illustrations, those silly marketing layer diagrams, and "simple" illustrations of how Java works.
Anyone who knows the difference between an interface and a class will love this.
- Beyond words. This is one of the greatest texts ever written.
- While I don't have anything against using a *little* humor to get a point across, the entire point of this book is apparently to be humorous while trying to be an introduction to the Java language. It fails in both respects. It is so heavily laced with attempts at over-the-top humor that it becomes unreadable. The reader is left sifting the text for actual information about Java, and often coming up empty-handed. I finally concluded that this book is actually intended for *experienced* Java programmers who have the background to appreciate the humor, but who obviously would have had to have learned their Java elsewhere.
- This is not-- let me repeat, NOT-- a book to get to learn Java. There is absolutely nothing in this book that will teach you Java if don't already know it. From reading some of the other reviews, there are obviously people out there who thought it would be a good idea to try to learn a programming language from a book titled "Mr. Bunny's Big Cup o' Java". Learn from their mistakes!
What this is is a very amusing read if you're a programmer and a geek and have a strange sense of humor. It's a good book to leave in the bathroom if you often have other programmer geeks over. Especially if you don't mind some raised eyebrows from everybody else when the person in the bathroom stays in there for half an hour, giggling the entire time.
Read more...
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by Richard Hightower and Joseph D. Gradecki. By Wiley.
The regular list price is $45.00.
Sells new for $3.95.
There are some available for $2.25.
Read more...
Purchase Information
4 comments about Mastering Resin.
- it seems the 'authors' copied materials from caucho's site without testing anything at all. and they can't even copy things right(large chunks of thing are missing almost on every page) their worse offense occured on load balancing (charpter 19) where EVERYTHING IS WRONG! Have the 'authors' even used resin? Has anyone really reviewed or edited the book? How can so much garbage got published? Jesus Christ will be so displeased to see such a piece of crap was dedicated to him! Richard and Joseph, you two are truly shameless!
- This is by far the worst technical book I have ever read! full of ridiculous errors! I don't think a single person proof read the book. Don't get ripped off! STAY AWAY! I would donate it to my library but I wouldn't want the library to put trash on the shelf. My advise is to just read the online docs from caucho.com and if your questions aren't answered there then you should reconsider using resin at all.
- A coworker loaned me this book, which I attempted to use to setup some of the more advanced features of Resin. I read the one relevant chapter, which was lightweight and riddled with errors in both the code/config listings and the narrative. This book is worthless. I found what I needed on Caucho's web site.
- The book is not accurate and what it does cover just skims the surface. If you want accurate info, go to Resins web site. Total waste of money.
Read more...
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by Simon Guest. By Microsoft Press.
The regular list price is $59.99.
Sells new for $3.80.
There are some available for $0.81.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Microsoft .NET and J2EE Interoperability Toolkit (Pro-Developer).
- Today's Enterprises are heterogenous environments that make writing reliable efficient applications a nightmare at the best of times. This book gives the modern developer the tools and strategies necessary to successfully build and deploy heterogenous applications in today's Enterprises.
It is nice to see that readers are offered many different strategies for interop including both webservices and binary. In addition, the companion CD actually contains TONS of usefull stuff including all the code, and usefull 3rd party applications. Truly a must have.
- It's an essential resource for any architect or developer who is involved in integrating the two platforms, J2EE and .Net, with enough breadth and depth in both being a technical reference as well as offering practical examples and solutions. The samples are working applications that can quickly jumpstart design and development, providing enough understanding and is presented in a clear concise manner.
It has helped us resolve some rather complex interoperable challenges that we've had with some of our customer applications, and saved us an immense amount of time and resource in research. If you are looking for a quick start to resolving a complex problem, this would be a great place to begin. Kudos!
- This book is a godsend for anyone who wants to learn how to successfully integrate .NET and J2EE software systems. Simon's writing style is clear and engaging, the book is well structured, and there are copious examples which provide concrete examples of each aspect of .NET/J2EE integration. One of the book's distinguishing features is that it covers a wide range of scenarios, such as XML data interchange, web services interoperability, messaging with MSMQ and the integrating with the presentation tier. The book ships with several useful third party Java products on a CD that allow the reader to immediately try out the code samples. Highly recommended!
- Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt is what J2 enthusiasts cling to when discussing .NET technologies. Simon cuts through these biases with concise, helpful guidance of how to interoperate. IBM and Microsoft both have committed to interoperability and Mr. Guest's book shows how that has real-world applicability. This book shows how an IT organization does not have to commit to J2 or .NET, but BOTH can interoperate and solve the problem. This book is no-nonsense and gives both audiences of developers equal perspective and guidance. Both platforms have their own value. This book attempts to bring synergy and achieves success in doing so. Bravo!
- This book was very helpful to solve my interoperability problems w/o building crazy wrapper code. I had two huge issues, I was struggling to build an XML web services bridge channel between my j2ee application and microsoft C# application. I had several issues with encodings and XML content issues. I had integration problems with couple of j2ee applications with VB app. This book helped me to solve them.
This book is perfect balance for understanding all microsoft <-> j2ee integration specific concepts and code guidance. Simon guest done terrific job explaining the concepts with good level of details to support both from j2ee and .net perspectives. The author has so much grip and clarity on the subject, makes it so simple for understanding and illustrations and very clear to read. A must have for java and .net developers.
Read more...
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by Iain Shigeoka. By Manning Publications.
The regular list price is $39.95.
Sells new for $20.00.
There are some available for $10.31.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Instant Messaging in Java: The Jabber Protocols.
- I should not have started this book in the afternoon. I could not put it down. This is a very unusual book that teaches things that are Jabber unrelated. We participate in the construction of a Jabber server and Jabber client as we go through the book. The construction is not your usual namby-pamby baloney either. The construction, while not commercial grade, leaves us with an application which could easily be refactored into whatever you want to do with Jabber. Another good book by Manning. Manning is having quite a Fall in 2002.
- A great book, very well written, and very intresting.
Realy helped me to enter the new of world of Jabber, and to understand its internals. A must have.
- Instant Messaging in Java is an excellant and informative book for all levels of programmers. If you are new to IM and would like a book that will catapult you into to this technology, this is the book for you. The program examples are easy to follow for if you have java experience. Also if you are an experiened programmer planning to implement production code the insights gained from this book are invaluable. Mr. Shigeoka has done an excellent job of stressing the Jabber protocols yet using java's multi-platform capabilities. Highly recommended!
- Highly recommended for any developer with some Java experience who is interested in IM technology. Iain Shigeoka takes you through the background of the technology, and then takes you through an easy to follow guide to produce a fully working Jabber server and test client. The book also includes a very usefull reference section and stresses important issues relating to the technology. I have personally found this book invaluable whilst producing a Jabber framework as part of my dissertation, and has given me direction to further my knowledge in this area, buy the book!:)
- I have read some of this book and I don't like it that much. I personally feel the author spends too much time with things that are pretty easy to compress.
Looking backwards I think the Jabber documentation is enough to write an IM client. I wrote one for alarming purposes. This is the first edition and the book has plenty of errors in the text. ( The code samples seem to be O.K.). Obviously the author was so busy pushing out his book that he didn't let anyone proofread it.I would recommend to buy another book ( there are plenty ) or rely on the Jabber documentation and the plenty of samples the web has to offer.
Read more...
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by Kenneth Lambert and Thomas Whaley. By Brooks/Cole Pub Co.
The regular list price is $42.37.
Sells new for $34.50.
There are some available for $3.02.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about An Invitation to Computer Science: Laboratory Manual, Java Edition.
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by Andrew C. Staugaard. By Prentice Hall.
The regular list price is $85.00.
Sells new for $0.96.
There are some available for $0.82.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Java for Computer Information Systems.
- If you go and compare Mr. Staugaard's previous edition of this book to the 1999 version just read his Structured and Object-Oriented Techniques. You will see they are basically the same book. Thanks for your time.
- I'm a teacher for introductory programming course and this book is selected as basic course book. The only star is for some ideas about programming algorithms. Otherwise the book is simply not for people starting programming. Without ANY explanation about any development environment after chapter 1 one can find a sample program and modest "edit, compile and run". Geez! How to edit? Who's the guy compile? Where to run? I should write my own instruction for all of this. Later in ch.3 author uses custom package keyboardInput without any explanation how to use it. Then he spends half of chapter 4 (before most of the basic stuff !) to talk about it. From the different places of the book you may find details that author isn't a big expert in Java, i.e. talking about data types he persistently calls them 'classes'(i.e. "assume short class" - real quotation!). Guy might not know that class Short exists, but short is not class at all. As usual book also contains a set of errors and/or misprints and the price is above average, so I'm tired to agree with students that this is not the best book :) for their course.
- As a student who is currently using this text book I am glad I don't go to school in Canada. They must have differing ideas about what is appropriate relative to the topic at hand. My understanding of the purpose of this book is not to teach JAVA, rather, it is to teach basic Structuring Techniques INDEPENDENT of the language choosen to write in. In this capacity, the book is excellent! Languages change but classic Structuring Technique does not. This book does an excellent job of teaching control structure techniques as well as algorithm defination. Many large Universities teach control structures and allow the student to program their work in whatever language they wish. The Author chooses to introduce his readers to the hotest language on the market at this time which is JAVA. Languages change, structuring technique does not. It's that simple. I highly recommend this book to anyone desiring to learn the proper method to develop a program.
- After reading the beginning of previous review I am also glad (s)he 'don't go to school in Canada'.But I should admit that the book is possibly the best in explanation of programming fundamentals. I couldn't find any comparable book with such big attention to programming basics. I agree with previous reviewer that knowledge of fundamentals is much more important and gives you an ability to learn any programming language faster and really understand what you should do in your programs. But if Java is selected for this course the Java content should be cleaned from a lot of errors and some stuff should be explained better. So I give the book 3 stars to further establish this mark.
- I have used this text in an introductory programming course. I have two personal biases that make this text attractive. (1)I want a text that does not concentration on the development environment. (2)I teach in a business college; therefore, I want business examples. This text satisfies both my desires. It is not filled with menu selections and button clicks that overwhelm algorithm design. Most of its examples relate to business. As a result, my students find the book something that relates to their career choice.
When using the text in the introductory programming course, I found the emphasis on structured design a benefit. By playing down the object-oriented aspects of Java until after the basic control structures were presented, the text gave the students an opportunity to learn to create an algorithm before they had to tackle an entire system. It is one of the few texts that did not need a supplemental algorithm design text.
Read more...
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by Meghraj Thakkar. By Que.
The regular list price is $39.99.
Sells new for $3.81.
There are some available for $0.02.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about e-Commerce Applications Using Oracle8i and Java From Scratch.
- I have a basically Java background but no Oracle experience. This book helped me in understanding the ways in which I can make use of Oracle technology and my Java knowledge while working on e-Commerce projects. The scalability and performance topics in the book helped me a lot in my current project.
- I have read several books about eCommerce development. This is the only book that gave me enough information to understand the various aspects of developing eCommerce applications. The book uses the idea of an application that is developed throughout the book and various issues are dealt with in a logical fashion. Very practical and full of valuable tips. I was able to run all the code (some code had errors but I was easily able to fix them). I am disappointed that some reviews are focussing on a few typos in the book instead of looking at the bigger picture.
- Don't even bother about this book. The only thing good about this book is its title. It is a waste of time and money. There are so many good books out there.
- This book is a real value for those who want to get started on Oracle with Java. Less pages and enough to digest information. Of course, if you are loking to master Java technologies or Oracle or eCommerce, this not the deal for you. (...)
- This book lacks the detail required to get someone new up and running. The first 2 chapters are the best, but still need a little polishing. The rest of the book is lacking quite a bit of neccessary information so a user can read it and use the concepts.
Read more...
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by Michael Landy and Saleem Siddiqui and Jeff Swisher. By Sams.
The regular list price is $59.99.
Sells new for $27.74.
There are some available for $5.00.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Borland JBuilder Developer's Guide.
- I have followed the instructions for the example in Chapter 11 very carefully (twice!!!) and was unable to get the program to run successfully. There is some problem with the jTreeCourses and the CoursesPanel in the jSplitPane, they don't appear on the panel when I run the program.
I then looked at the code on the CD and found that it was different from the code the book guides the user to generate. What a waste of time and money!
- I was able to use many of the design guidelines in the EJB chapters. I found them useful out-of-the-box. The sample code showed me how to implement it. I would like to see more pattern implementations within this book.
- I was able to use a couple of the pieces of the code in the project I was working on - thanks it saved me lots of time.
- The book's stated audience is intermediate to advanced level Java programmers, yet 75 percent of the book is an introductory tutorial on how to write Java applications, not how to use JBuilder. The first 200 pages were JBuilder-specific, well written, and they got me up to speed quickly with using the enterprise edition. The rest of the book was not at all helpful - I bought the book to learn to use JBuilder effectively, and learn some tips and tricks from those who have been using it for some years, not how to use JDBC and IO.
I also found the section on JBuilder's data-aware components to be severely lacking. JBuilder obviously has a robust toolset, and a quick explanation of two of the provided components was inadequate. The inconsistency in the "In Practice" sections was also disturbing. A product of several authors, but it would have been too easy to notice and solve this problem to be forgiven. All that said, the book is well written and organized, hence the 3 star rating. But beware of the stated intended audience and book content before you buy.
- I have never seen a book which so often would reference a topic or word or idea that it goes on to explain LATER in the book or section. Weird. It does seem comprehensive but not a easy read or anything. I have read better. I am glad, though, that it is NOT JBuilder specific because I am just learning JAVA and it is good to have JAVA information rather than just JBuilder interface information.
Read more...
Posted in Java (Monday, October 13, 2008)
Written by Paul F. Whelan and Derek Molloy. By Springer.
The regular list price is $129.00.
Sells new for $93.63.
There are some available for $95.90.
Read more...
Purchase Information
3 comments about Machine Vision Algorithms in Java: Techniques and Implementation.
- If you need to learn and apply machine vision techniques this is a good place to start.
- This is a good book on algorithms in machine vision, not computer vision. It is important that you know the difference before you buy this book. Machine vision is used in manufacturing plants for detecting the parts according to your needs. On the other hand, computer vision is integrated into AI where you can create vision input for your robotics or AI system.
That's why this book is good for those who wants to create Photoshop-like effects or implement systems for part analysis. If you are looking for something related with robotics, look for elsewhere.
- There are better books on Java imaging and better books on machine vision. However, where this book stands out is in its catalogue of machine vision algorithms. The book is really a vehicle for the author's machine vision application, complete with user interface, entitled "NeatVision". You can download it off the web complete with a developer's guide on how to extend the application. There's really nothing unique about the built-in transforms. If you are already familiar with computer vision- and you should be if you buy this book- you will most likely already have heard of most of them. What it does enable you to do is to chain transforms together to perform larger more complex machine vision tasks.
As for the book itself, the first chapter is a forgettable overview of machine vision, and the second chapter is an equally forgettable chapter on Java and imaging in Java. Chapters three through six comprise the meat of the book. These chapters talk about the specific algorithms for machine vision transformations divided into the categories of general machine vision techniques, morphology, texture analysis, and color analysis. Chapter seven switches gears and talks about the author's full visual application, Neatvision. Details are given on how to use and and to extend the application. The appendices are about NeatVision's graphic file formats, API specification, and visual interface components respectively. My advice to the potential buyer of this book is to visit the application's website, and if you find NeatVision very interesting you will find the book valuable. I would type the address into this review myself, but Amazon usually kicks out reviews with web addresses in them. The search engine keyword is just "NeatVision".
Read more...
|
|
|
Developing Java Servlets (2nd Edition) (Sams White Book)
Mr. Bunny's Big Cup O'Java (Mr. Bunny Series)
Mastering Resin
Microsoft .NET and J2EE Interoperability Toolkit (Pro-Developer)
Instant Messaging in Java: The Jabber Protocols
An Invitation to Computer Science: Laboratory Manual, Java Edition
Java for Computer Information Systems
e-Commerce Applications Using Oracle8i and Java From Scratch
Borland JBuilder Developer's Guide
Machine Vision Algorithms in Java: Techniques and Implementation
|