Showing posts with label book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book. Show all posts

3/17/2013

The GE Way Fieldbook: Jack Welch's Battle Plan for Corporate Revolution Review

The GE Way Fieldbook: Jack Welch's Battle Plan for Corporate Revolution
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
"Jack Welch is arguably the most lauded CEO in the world...Such leading magazines as Time, Fortune, and Business Week all lavished praise upon him. They described him at times as the best CEO in America; at times, these magazines credited GE with being the best-run company in the nation...Welch built GE into the most successful American corporation of the late twentieth century by forging and then implementing a series of business strategies that have become his trademark: Business is simple. Don't make business overly complicated. Face reality. Don't be afraid of change. Fight bureaucracy. Get boundaryless. Use the brains of your workers. Find the best ideas, inside or outside your company, and then put those ideas into practice. These strategies and others have formed the building blocks of Jack Welch's battle for corporate revolution...The Welch strategies have been described in a number of popular business books...Most of these books describe the aforementioned business strategies, and others as well, and give an excellent overview of what Welch and GE have accomplished. What The GE Way Fieldbook sets out to accomplish is not simply to explain the strategies but to offer a blueprint of how other companies can implement those strategies expeditiously and seamlessly in their own business...In contrast with the other fieldbooks, The GE Way Fieldbook is the first of its kind to focus on the inner workings and business strategies of a specific company...While we include much of the GE story throughout the book, the primary objective is to provide a road map for those wishing to implement GE's practices in their own organizations. As a result, most chapters include not only textual material but also self-assessment exercises, action steps, and internal GE documents. It is worth noting that these documents, most of which have been provided by General Electric, have never appeared in book form" (pp.1-2).
In this context, Robert Slater divides his book into two main sections. But, in this review, I only focus on the first section as follows.
I. The GE Way: A Fieldbook for Corporate Revolution: In this section, he focuses on the different GE business strategies and initiatives within four learning modules.
1. The Leadership Module (Chapters 1-4): In this module, Slater explains:
* five characteristics of best quality leaders described by Jack Welch in 1997.
* key GE leadership ingredients-the four E:energy, energizer, edge, and execution-, and authentic leadership model of GE as refined views of Welch on leadership in 1999.
* advices of GE's successful executives to GE's senior and middle-level executives all around the world:
(1) Performance: Focus on current job performance...,
(2) Expertise: Become proficient in one business/technical area...,
(3) Ownership: Don't whine about your career...,
(4) Challenge and Visibility: Take the hard job...,
(5) Mentors/Supporters/Role Models: Broaden your base support...,
(6) Global Experience/Cultural Breadth: Expose yourself and family to different cultures early...,
* GE's assessment-360 degree feedback- and reward policy.
2. The Empowerment Module (Chapters 5-6): In this module, Slater explains:
* Welch's Work-Out model and six basic objectives of this model:
(1) reducing bureaucracy,
(2) improving organizational processes,
(3) empowering employees; reducing vertical boundaries,
(4) breaking down intra-organizational walls,
(5) developing formal alliances or informal relationships with customers,
(6) developing other extra-organizational relationships.
* how GE implements this Work-Out model.
3. The Organization Module (Chapters 7-10): In this module, by providing a series of questionnaires and other self-assessment exercises, Slater explains Welch's boundaryless organization strategy as the GE's emerging culture and the soul of GE's integrated diversity.
4. The Customer Module (Chapters 11-15): In this module, Slater presents a complete picture of GE's Six Sigma program, how it began, how it works, what impact it has had on the company, and what Jack Welch thinks about it. Welch argues that "Six Sigma is the most important management training thing we've ever had. It's better than going to Harvard Business School."
I highly recommend this invaluable guide.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The GE Way Fieldbook: Jack Welch's Battle Plan for Corporate Revolution



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The GE Way Fieldbook: Jack Welch's Battle Plan for Corporate Revolution

Read More...

3/08/2013

The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry Review

The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Mario Livio's title suggests an exploration of unsolvable equations, in particular the drama enshrouding the mathematical conundrum of solving general, fifth degree polynomial equations, known as quintics. His subtitle, "How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry," indicates that his work will also explore the role of symmetry in ultimately resolving the question of whether such polynomials could be solved by a formulas using nothing more than addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and nth roots. These two subjects portend an interesting discussion on the solvability of equations and the peculiar mathematical race in Renaissance Europe to "discover" the magical formulas for solving cubics and quartics.
One could reasonably expect that the groundbreaking work of Tartaglia, Cardano. Ferraro, Galois, Abel, Kronecker, Hermite, and Klein would be encompassed in this survey, and indeed they are. However, purchasers of this book are given no indication that they will spend well over half their reading time on rehashes of Abel's tragic life story and the mythology of Evariste Galois's foolish death, Emmy Noether's challenges as a woman mathematician in Germany, a history of group theory, Einstein's theory of relativity, the place of string theory in modern cosmology, the survival benefits of symmetry in evolution, Daniel Gorenstein's 30-year proof that "every finite simple group is either a member of one of the eighteen families or is one of the twenty-six sporadic groups," a trite and unnecessary diversion on human creativity, and finally, an even more outlandish (and utterly inconclusive) "comparison" of Galois's brain with that of Albert Einstein. The persevering reader can only conclude that anything and everything that remotely touches upon the quintic and Galois's work was given a chapter of its own, a mathematical version of "everything but the kitchen sink." The end result is an unfortunate mishmash, a sort of treetop skimming of modern mathematics, post-Newtonian physics, and cognitive theory.
Sadly, Mr. Livio misses a number of opportunities to enlighten his readers on the theory of polynomials, the nature of their roots, and the curious symmetries one encounters. For example, he makes no effort to discuss the nature of polynomial roots beyond a short Appendix, and he passes on the chance to detail the marvelous symmetry of imaginary roots in equations such as x^6 = 1. While he outlines the general thrust of Galois's approach to the unsolvability of quintics, Livio also mentions that Hermite found a method to solve the general quintic using elliptic functions, but we are not told how such a solution is discovered. What about sixth degree polynomials and beyond? Mr. Livio doesn't tell us - he's too busy worrying over the fairness of the first draft lottery in 1970. There is also the small matter of the author's style of explication. At times, such as his introduction to symmetry, he writes for a general, non-mathematical audience. Later, he tosses out references to elliptic functions without explanation and culminates his group theory discussion with sentences like, "We can use the family tree of these subgroups to create a sequence of composition factors (order of the parent group divided by that of the maximal normal subgroup)."
What THE EQUATION THAT COULDN'T BE SOLVED really needed was a good editor to bring these widespread ramblings into focus. A bit of truth in advertising might have been appropriate as well, but a book entitled "The Role of Group Theory in Modern Mathematics and Science" (primarily what this book is about, along with the author's peculiar obsession with Evariste Galois's death by duel) wouldn't tap well into the market developed by Keith Devlin, John Allen Paulos, Ian Stewart, Eli Maor, Simon Singh, and other popularizers of mathematics for mass market audiences. In the end, this book falls short of its companions for its sheer lack of focus and somewhat misleading cover presentation. At times, the book is interesting; at others, regrettably, it's simply too much of a superficial slog through too many loosely connected disciplines.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry

Read More...

3/07/2013

Web Design Complete Course Review

Web Design Complete Course
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I'm more experienced in print design, Photoshop and Illustrator are now old friends, so I expect to climb a steep learning curve with a program like Dreamweaver. However, this book is not proving a great travelling companion. I have found many, many examples of tutorials not working according to the explanations. It's unsettling in a way no other program guide i've tried has been. It feels like they skipped the proofreader stage. The actual projects are good, the design of the web page is quite nice and that's what attracted me to the book. Now I'm just struggling through it to get my money's worth since I can't get my money back!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Web Design Complete Course


Shows how to use four Web power tools- Fireworks, Dreamweaver, ColdFusion and Flash-together in one book
Offers a full-color tutorial that walks the reader start to finish through the process of building a media-rich, e-commerce Web site
After completing this book, readers will have a polished, fully functional e-commerce site adaptable to their own needs
CD-ROM contains all the files and materials needed for the project


Buy Now

Click here for more information about Web Design Complete Course

Read More...

3/04/2013

Inkheart Review

Inkheart
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
From the very first pages of this wonderfully well constructed tale, to the very last page, I was hooked. The words of the author evoke wonderfully clear pictures in the reader's mind and the air of suspense is maintained without terrifying younger readers. I would reccommend this book to any reader from fifth grade to adult. The characters were believable and, as a reader, I cared what happened to them. The reverence for books made it doubly rewarding. ...

Click Here to see more reviews about: Inkheart



Buy NowGet 44% OFF

Click here for more information about Inkheart

Read More...

2/24/2013

Mathematical Structures for Computer Science Review

Mathematical Structures for Computer Science
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This book will leave you high and dry on many occassions. Gersting explains the obvious in each section with her practice problems and then throws problems that are impossible to do without an extra book at the end of each section. Unless you have a very good professor that notices and makes up for the grey areas in this book, you are in big trouble my friend. Discrete Math is a fun subject, this book makes it a total hassle.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Mathematical Structures for Computer Science

Computing Curricula 2001 (CC2001), a joint undertaking of the Institute for Electrical and Electronic Engineers/Computer Society (IEEE/CS) and the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), identifies the essential material for an undergraduate degree in computer science.This Sixth Edition of Mathematical Structures for Computer Science covers all the topics in the CC2001 suggested curriculumfor a one-semester intensive discrete structures course, and virtually everything suggested for a two-semester version of a discrete structures course. Gersting's text binds together what otherwise appears to be a collection of disjointed topics by emphasizing the following themes: ' Importance of logical thinking' Power of mathematical notation' Usefulness of abstractions

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Mathematical Structures for Computer Science

Read More...

Basic Candle Making: All the Skills and Tools You Need to Get Started (How To Basics) Review

Basic Candle Making: All the Skills and Tools You Need to Get Started (How To Basics)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I am totally new to candle making and This book takes you step by step through the process to get you started. There are plenty of pictures and simple, easy to understand directions. In addition, he gives helpful hints on some of the lower cost items you can use. Highly recommend it for any beginner.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Basic Candle Making: All the Skills and Tools You Need to Get Started (How To Basics)


Each step illustrated with color photos
How to avoid common mistakes
Information on scents and dyes
Step-by-step color photographs and descriptive detail make this book indispensable for beginners looking to create beautiful and functional scented candles on their very first try, and for experienced crafters who want to sharpen their skills. Precise instructions eliminate the guesswork that too often creeps into how-to books. Gleaned from the expertise of master candle makers, this guide presents everything a novice needs to know to get started crafting traditional tapers and molded candles, container and rolled beeswax candles, and interesting variations on each. Includes guidelines for buying tools and materials, preparing the work space, and working safely and effectively, as well as suggested shopping lists.
This book includes the contributions of veteran candle makers and crafters. Scott Ham is a master candle maker and owner of The Gettysburg Candle Company and Moonacre Iron Works in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Alan Wycheck is a photographer based in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Buy NowGet 25% OFF

Click here for more information about Basic Candle Making: All the Skills and Tools You Need to Get Started (How To Basics)

Read More...

2/22/2013

FTCE General Knowledge Test (REA) - The Best Teachers' Test Preparation (REA Test Preps) Review

FTCE General Knowledge Test (REA) - The Best Teachers' Test Preparation (REA Test Preps)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Very thorough and well-written, but many of the questions are above and beyond the complexity of those encountered on the General Knowledge test. I used it in conjunction with the GK test preparation book published by Cliff's Notes. The CN's volume tracks very closely with the GK test sections--and tells you precisely which section of the GK test it is addressing. I took the CN book as my main study guide and used this, the REA book, to provide me with additional practice questions of somewhat greater complexity within the context of the CN's guide. Had I done the reverse and used the REA volume as my main study guide for the GK, I'd still be studying what is ulitmately a large body of extraneous material--and feeling depressed at my ignorance. (Yes, I passed. :) )

Click Here to see more reviews about: FTCE General Knowledge Test (REA) - The Best Teachers' Test Preparation (REA Test Preps)

REA … Real review, Real practice, Real results. Take your teaching career to the head of the class.FTCE General Knowledge TestFor Florida Licensure Are you prepared to excel on the FTCE? * Get to know the test, how it is scored, and much more.* Set up a study schedule by following our flexible, results-driven timeline* Take one of the practice tests to discover what you know and what you should know* Use REA's advice to ready yourself for proper study and success Sharpen your knowledge and skills * The book's comprehensive review features coverage of each of the four subtests: Essay, English with Skills, Mathematics, and Reading* Lessons reinforce necessary skills* Key tutorials enhance specific abilities needed on the test* Targeted drills increase comprehension and help organize study Practice for real* Create the closest experience to test-day conditions with three full-length practice tests* Chart your progress with full and detailed explanations of all answers* Boost your confidence with test-taking strategies and experienced advice Get to the head of the class! Get certified! REA books and software have proven to be the extra support teacher candidates need to pass their challenging test for state licensure. Our comprehensive study guides are teacher-recommended and written by educators who have mastered the test and the related program of study.

Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about FTCE General Knowledge Test (REA) - The Best Teachers' Test Preparation (REA Test Preps)

Read More...

2/10/2013

4th of July Review

4th of July
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Wow, what a story! There is a reason why James Patterson sells millions of books and great mysteries like 4th of July are the reason why. In the fourth installment of the popular Women's Murder Club series, Lieutenant Lindsay Boxer (the head of San Francisco Police Department's Homicide Division) is fighting to save her career after she is accused in a wrongful death suit, and at the same time struggling to help solve a series of grisly murders that have shaken the small town of Half Moon Bay, where she has retreated to chill out while on administrative leave from the SFPD.
As the story unfolds Lieutenant Boxer is hot on the trail of a couple of suspects that she and her partner believe are responsible for a recent string of seedy motel murders. Turns out the suspects are two very youthful teenage siblings, and in the process of apprehending these two, Boxer is forced to use deadly force to defend herself and her partner. When all is said and done, Boxer's partner is critically wounded and unconscious, Boxer herself has been hit twice, a 15 year old girl is dead, and her 13 year old brother is paralyzed for life from the neck down. Was it a legitimate use of deadly force? Not in the minds of the parents it wasn't. And the media has already found her guilty without the benefit of trail!
In Half Moon Bay someone is killing local residents in a gruesome fashion reminiscent of an unsolved homicide from Lieutenant Boxer's earliest days on the force. She is supposed to be laying low in the sleepy little seaside resort, gearing up the trail of her life, but when the killing starts, she finds herself hard pressed to remain disinterested and unengaged. Before long she is swept up in the investigation and a target for murder herself!
A great weekend read. The chapters just fly by! Also recommended are the other three stories in the Women's Murder Club series: 1st to Die, 2nd Chance, and 3rd Degree. Be the first on your block to collect all four books!

Click Here to see more reviews about: 4th of July



Buy NowGet 18% OFF

Click here for more information about 4th of July

Read More...

2/09/2013

Valley of the Dolls Review

Valley of the Dolls
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
If you're like me, you never read romance novels, never watch soap operas, and shun editorial trash like Cosmopolitan. But in this age of girl-power books (i.e. Bridget Jones, et al), "Valley Of The Dolls" has become popular once again, and a whole new crowd (the twentysomething female market)is now exposed to this cult classic.
And you know what? It's intriguing. It's captivating. Set back in the 50s, you heark back to the days of glamour girls, Hollywood pictures, and dapper leading men. In each chapter, Susann fleshes out the character portraits of 3 girls who made it big, rags-to-riches style: Anne--a model, Jennifer--a starlet, and Neely--a singer. I hate to admit it, but I was entranced by their stories of sex, scandal, and downward spiral into prescription drug addiction. It's drama about drama queens. I would ordinarily dismiss this book as trashy romance genre--but like others, i can't. Why? well, Susann wrote this book as a groundbreaker--It was written almost 50 years ago but the tales are so incredibly modern you'd think Susann was writing about modern-day life. She paved the way for the tell-all expose, the behind-the-scenes scandals, the agony and ecstasy, the poor problems of the rich and famous. It was "Dynasty" before "Dynasty" was even invented. It was a shocker, and it's tragic. You're not going to find much humor in this novel at all, especially being that the "Dolls" that the book revolves around are drugs. An added benefit of reading "Valley of the Dolls" is that it transports the reader back into the yesteryear; I feel like I'm in a black-and-white movie with Garbo and Monroe--Susann's detail for creating ambience are very much appreciated.
If you think this book is flimsy beach reading--it's not. It really gave way to a whole new genre. Sure, it's no Shakespeare--but make this the one exception. Although it may be G-rated compared to today's fiction fare, Susann's subtle flair for storytelling is surprisingly solid, with twists and turns to keep you on your feet.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Valley of the Dolls



Buy NowGet 20% OFF

Click here for more information about Valley of the Dolls

Read More...

2/04/2013

Biscuit Storybook Collection Review

Biscuit Storybook Collection
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
How can children's book publisher HarperCollins improve Alyssa Satin Capucilli's Biscuit series? By offering 10 of Biscuit's most endearing stories in one book. That's exactly what they've done with the "Biscuit Storybook Collection."
Biscuit is a sweet-faced puppy you want to grab right out of the pages and cuddle. He and the little girl share the simple joys of childhood, like getting ready for bed and having a picnic. They share the excitement of adventures like being in a pet show and having a birthday party. They share the ability to take things that don't turn out quite right and make them wonderful.
The "Biscuit Storybook Collection" is the perfect book to introduce a child to the joys of reading.
The large typeface, simple words and repetition make the stories easy to read. The sweet plots and the delightful illustrations by Pat Schories make the stories a joy to read. The pictures are very gentle, with soft lines and colors, but are full of expression and activity. They are very effective at creating interest and encouraging the beginning reader to keep going to find out what happens next.
The stories included in the "Biscuit Storybook Collection" are:
Biscuit
Biscuit Wins a Prize
Biscuit's New Trick
Happy Birthday, Biscuit!
Biscuit's Picnic
Biscuit's Day at the Beach
Time to Paint Biscuit!
Biscuit Meets the Neighbors
Biscuit Goes to the Park
Biscuit and the Bunny
The "Biscuit Storybook Collection" is a must-have for your child's library. At my 3-year old's insistence, we have read stories from the "Biscuit Storybook Collection" every day since we got the book (2 months ago.) She doesn't show any signs of losing interest in the "Biscuit Storybook Collection" anytime soon, and I must add, neither do I. It's a very pleasant surprise to find a book that I not only don't mind reading over and over, I actually enjoy and look forward to reading over and over. The price is right, too. The "Biscuit Storybook Collection," complete with 10 different stories, doesn't cost any more than the price of a single book. I encourage you to buy this book today!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Biscuit Storybook Collection

The sweet, yellow puppy is here – Woof! Join Biscuit in all his adventures. Each day presents the chance to make new friends or learn something new. A collection of ten stories about the sweet, yellow puppy Biscuit. Contains: Bathtime for Biscuit, Biscuit, Biscuit and the Bunny, Biscuit Goes to the Park, Biscuit Meets the Neighbors, Biscuit's Birthday, Biscuit's Day at the Beach, Biscuit's New Trick, Biscuit's Picnic and Time to paint, Biscuit! Ages 2+

Buy NowGet 30% OFF

Click here for more information about Biscuit Storybook Collection

Read More...

2/03/2013

The Last Book In The Universe Review

The Last Book In The Universe
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
My youngest child (almost 11 as of this writing) often enjoys having books read aloud, in the evening or while we're on vacation far from the television. It can be a challenge to find something we'll both enjoy. My only stipulation is that I get to pick the book (and that they won't come from his favorite horror series books) His stipulation is that we'll stop reading if the first chapter is boring.
This book was one we both enjoyed. We read a chapter or two a night, sometimes more when it was really exciting. We always looked forward to reading some more.

The main character is an outcast within an outcast society, Spaz (an epileptic loner.) He meets some other misfits -- an elderly writer in a world without books, a homeless five year old who can only say one word and an advanced (improved) human who goes against the rules of her own perfect Eden.
The story, told in first person from the view of Spaz, was engrossing, filling our minds with sometimes horrifying visions of a new futuristic world, where a huge earthquake years ago upset civilization as we now know it. The gray skied, cement grounded cities (Urbs) are run by latchlords, gang lords who make and enforce their own ever changing rules. They can and do eliminate anyone for any reason - or no reason at all. Escape from reality is sought by nearly everyone, including the latchlords. Most people have become addicts to needles inserted into the brain, giving the viewer a realistic mind show with images of a perfect world. Mindprobes have replaced drugs, TV and video games, but they are beginning to disrupt the 'leadership' of the latchlords, bringing anarchy and total destruction to the Urbs.
Far away from the Urbs (which are connected by pipelines) is Eden, home of the "proovs" who are genetically improved humans, thought to be superior to the 'normals.' "Normals" aren't allowed in Eden, where they could actually see a blue sky and green grass, things they 'd heard about from old timers, but which they believe can only be fairy tales.
Spaz's foster sister Bean - the only human who means anything to him - is dying in another Urb, and this emotionally numbed boy decides to risk leaving his Urb and travel through the pipelines to visit her one last time.
He is unhappy to end up journeying with his outcast acquaintances Ryter and Chox), aided by Lanaya (a perfect girl from Eden) on a journey to save Bean -- and while they're at it, to change the world. Likeable characters plus some who aren't so nice. A touch of violence and scary confrontations. A good book for encouraging discussions of prejudices, environmental issues, reading, writing and alternative communications.
We liked it!

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Last Book In The Universe



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Last Book In The Universe

Read More...

2/02/2013

Game Engine Architecture Review

Game Engine Architecture
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Jason Gregory's book offers a 10,000-foot view of game engine architecture, covering every system found in modern game engines, and detailing how those systems interact. It details the subjects at a level easily understood by anyone with a modest level of programming experience -- even non-programmers can gain a solid understanding of engine design from the book. This would make a great first book for anyone interested in programming game engines, either as a hobby or a future career.
However, it is important to clarify the limits of the book. I do not consider this to be a programming book, since it does not present the material at a sufficiently low-level that would permit an inexperienced programmer to implement a game engine from the ground-up. It describes how the algorithms work in enough detail that you can understand the idea, but does not present complete code examples that would demonstrate exactly how the algorithms would be implemented. There are occasional code snippets, and brief examples from engines like Ogre, Unreal, and idtech. But most of the content is entirely prose.
Experienced programmers/game devs have the coding background to implement many of the designs described in the book from the level at which they are presented. But neophyte programmers will not find enough details in this book to implement a full game engine on their own. However, no one book could do an adequate job of detailing how to implement an entire game engine: learning to program a game engine from the ground-up requires a very large stack of books (especially for physics and AI). So it would be unfair to fault this book for what it is not.
The value of the book is in providing clear, prose descriptions of the functional blocks found in a game engine, covering alternate ways different engines implement certain features, and cross-referencing how those blocks interact.
Another positive is that the book benefits from a mature writing style. Unlike the "Oh wow! Cool! Dude! Whew, math is hard! {BG}" style of writing inflicted upon many intro/for-teens books, this book can be read by adults (and most teens) without any undue eye-rolling due to bad writing. Which, sad to say, is why I feel inclined to remark on this point. Granted, this book was written for a course a SoCal, so a more mature writing still is required. I do wish more games-related books would follow this convention, instead of assuming the reader is mentally bereft or a pre-teen.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Game Engine Architecture

A 2009 Game Developer Magazine Front Line Award Finalist, this book covers both the theory and practice of game engine software development, bringing together complete coverage of a wide range of topics. The concepts and techniques described are the actual ones used by real game studios like Electronic Arts and Naughty Dog. The examples are often grounded in specific technologies, but the discussion extends way beyond any particular engine or API. The references and citations make it a great jumping off point for those who wish to dig deeper into any particular aspect of the game development process. Intended as the text for a college level series in game programming, this book can also be used by amateur software engineers, hobbyists, self-taught game programmers, and existing members of the game industry. Junior game engineers can use it to solidify their understanding of game technology and engine architecture. Even senior engineers who specialize in one particular field of game development can benefit from the bigger picture presented in these pages.

Buy NowGet 10% OFF

Click here for more information about Game Engine Architecture

Read More...

1/31/2013

Open and Shut Review

Open and Shut
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
in town. Rosenfeldt worked in marketing for Tri-Star pictures before trying his hand at screenplays, and this, his first novel. He has a smooth, confident style and a hero steeped in courtroom shenanigans. Like Coben's hero, Myron Bolitar, Andy Carpenter is a sports nut and a smartass, but a loveable one. Like Koontz's heroes, Andy is hung up on his Golden Retriever, Tara, and much of the charm and humor of the character comes out in his frequent references to her.
Carpenter's first story (I say first, because the book cries out for a sequel or two or thirteen) involves an appeal in a case of capital murder. His case is tangled in his past with his beloved father, and his feeling that there is more than meets the eye to his dad's request for him to defend a man that he, himself, had convicted. Tangled with the defense of his client, Willie Miller, is Andy's own broken marriage and his attempt at reconciliation after he's already fallen in love with someone new.
The plot to prove Willie's innocence is less than original, and a little shallow, but the witty repartee and diarization style of writing adopted by Rosenfeldt is charming and breezy. Many small humorous passages will make you laugh, even though the scene is serious. Carpenter's explanation to Miller of why he will probably still lose the trial..."suppose Dinky University's football team goes down to Florida State and loses ....but the game doesn't count because FSU's water boy wasn't eligible....Dinky is still Dinky". Carpenter's rants against DNA, his soliloquy to the Yankees and his betting contests with his father, courtroom antics such as the stunt with Kevin's cousin -- all are irreverent and totally New Jersey in their origin and humor.
It's not a great novel, but it ranks as a great and entertaining first effort, and Rosenfeldt will have a terrific career if there are more like this to come!
Read it, enjoy,laugh!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Open and Shut



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Open and Shut

Read More...

1/25/2013

War Horse Review

War Horse
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
"War Horse" is a story of courage and endurance by horse and man, conveyed through the destruction that is war. Told from the viewpoint of the horse, the story can draw in the most reluctant reader, as children often feel more empathy for animals than people. Because of descriptions of grueling labor and unsound working conditions for the horses, the book is best directed toward fourth grade and up.
Joey, a gorgeous bay with four white stocking forelegs and a white cross on his forehead, is the War Horse. Albert is his 15-year-old human who trains and loves him. When his father sells the horse to the calvary for service in World War I, Albert swears to join when he is old enough and find Joey.
The insanity of matching a cavalry of horses and riders with sabers against soldiers with rifles and machine guns has to be one of the most insane moments in war history!! One-fourth of the horses are killed in the first battle. All but two die in the next battle this cavalry faces. Joey and his equal, Topthorn, a huge black Arabian, survive, only to be taken as prisoners by the Germans.
What Joey and Topthorn face as part of the team to pull the hospital cart to the battle front over and over is made right by kind treatment their German masters give to their wounds and injuries, and treat their fatigue at the end of day. Joey's worse experience comes when he and Topthorn and others must pull the artillery. Because these soldiers are dead tired themselves and also starving, they are not as attentive to the horses.
The most horrifying scene occurs when Joey is totally alone and runs and runs from the sound of cannons until he is trapped in No Man's Land, a barren area between the French and English on one side and the Germans on the other. Two rolls of barbed wire separate the land from the trenches. Joey finds himself in this area. What transpires is an incredible and beautiful moment in the midst of an insane war.
Of course, you must know that Albert is re-united with Joey. How that comes about is purely contrived, but welcome by a reader weary of the horrors of war for both man and horse.
Last week a fourth-grader asked me for a really good book to read. I showed him several. When he saw "War Horse," he wanted it at once. The next day he told me, "This is a great book." He was already half-way finished. So I went home and read my copy.
You will never look at a horse the same way again. Joey tells us about the people who tend him. Are they heavy-handed, hard, tender, kind, caring? What is it like with each type of person? What is it like to be a horse? But the best lesson is that horses are no longer used in battle (until a reader commented that horses are being used in Afghanistan! Barbarity in a barbaric place. What can one expect?)

Click Here to see more reviews about: War Horse



Buy Now

Click here for more information about War Horse

Read More...

1/20/2013

Silent Witness: A Novel (How Two Men Deals With One Another and Subsequently Changes After Experiencing the Anguish That Come From Being Accused of Murder) COMPLETE AND UNABRIDGED Review

Silent Witness: A Novel (How Two Men Deals With One Another and Subsequently Changes After Experiencing the Anguish That Come From Being Accused of Murder) COMPLETE AND UNABRIDGED
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is the fourth book I've read by Richard North Patterson, following "Degree of Guilt," "Eyes of a Child" and "Final Judgment," all of which were very well written. With "Silent Witness," Patterson easily surpasses even the lofty expectations I developed based on the stories I had read earlier and joins Elizabeth George and Dorothy Sayers as one of my favorite mystery writers. The story is masterfully crafted, weaving two murder mysteries separated by nearly thirty years into a seamless web of intrigue, betrayal and misguided loyalties. It is reminiscent of "Lone Star" in rooting its two mysteries in the small town social fabric with conflicts between Catholics, protestants and Jews; and between blacks and whites. The characters evolve in very credible ways. One can see the teenagers we first meet in the middle-aged characters we later visit, with their basic traits sometimes mellowed, sometimes entrenched; with dreams shattered and realities acknowledged. The book actually begins slowly, unlike other Patterson novels which firmly hook the reader in the first three pages. I found the ending a little less than satisfactory. I correctly guessed the identity of the guilty party and expected another character to do the same. The ending was good, but more satisfying to one of the characters than to the reader. The book is a must read and a real page turner.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Silent Witness: A Novel (How Two Men Deals With One Another and Subsequently Changes After Experiencing the Anguish That Come From Being Accused of Murder) COMPLETE AND UNABRIDGED



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Silent Witness: A Novel (How Two Men Deals With One Another and Subsequently Changes After Experiencing the Anguish That Come From Being Accused of Murder) COMPLETE AND UNABRIDGED

Read More...

12/25/2012

99 Degrees of Freemasonry: Turning the Solomon Key Review

99 Degrees of Freemasonry: Turning the Solomon Key
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The Masonic brother Klovekorn writes about the craft with a certain zeal and sincerity not often seen in European writers on the topic. The images situated in the middle of the book enhances the quality of the work abundantly. Don't be mislead by the title, he pretty much covers your basic Masonic motifs,landmarks,and tools etc.
I am in agreement with his assertion I quote "A lack of judgement has been shown by many Masonic jurisdictions in lossening membership entry requirements in a vain attempt to bolster membership numbers the general effect has been the infiltration of the rite by people only scantily interested in practising the art of Masonry, but who join to satisfy their superficial curiosities or to gain networks."
I also agree with his opinion of contemporary lodges initiating people but not teaching the true essence,allegory and symbolism of Freemasonry. Overall a very good treatise on Masonry from the craft lodge to the rite of Memphis & Misraim.

Click Here to see more reviews about: 99 Degrees of Freemasonry: Turning the Solomon Key

From the secret corridors of Scotland's Rosslyn Chapel to the dark crypts of Hitler's SS, the rise and fall of fraternal societies has shaped our world. Bro. Henning A. Klovekorn, in "99 Degrees of Freemasonry: Turning the Solomon Key" provides an inspirational and thought-provoking analysis of the philosophies, allegories and symbolism of Freemasonry. Take a journey of unrivaled passion from Knight Templar graves, hidden symbolism in European art to previously unpublished photos of the temples of the Grand Orient of France. This publication begins with the startling evidence of a European origin of Freemasonry and ends in the revelation of the highest ritual degrees of the Freemason Order. A must read for fans of the "Da Vinci Code" and sequel.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about 99 Degrees of Freemasonry: Turning the Solomon Key

Read More...

12/01/2012

Journey To The M.A. Degree Review

Journey To The M.A. Degree
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Journey to the M.A. Degree
Reviewed by Journey To The M.A. DegreeValerie Temple (c)2011Ventura, CA. Author Charlotte M. Liebel, M.Ed., who returned to college after raising her family, has written a new book that will give students a first hand look into continuing education as an adult. It is a wise investment for those who want to take their education further and make the most out of it: "for competing in the workforce...in every desired career." As a student myself I wish I would have had this valuable information and, if it were up to me, this "hand book" would be made available in all college book stores!
This book is Ms. Liebel's effort to give back to society, explaining why it is possible for adults to continue their education. Journey to the M.A. Degree gives examples of class work to express how ideas develop and how everyone can learn with no exceptions ~ "If we have the desire, we can do anything. Give yourself permission to go to college."
Not only does this book give brief previews of essays and study guides for college courses it explains the importance of the need for higher education in the workforce.
Ms. Liebel was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, with a strong influence of the philosophy of Mark Twain. As a young woman she and a friend would walk the streets of the French Quarters dressed up in their Sunday finest watching the artistic painters. From the alley facing St.Louis Cathedral, they would continue their journey and then enjoy a cup of chicory coffee and binets at the Café Du Monde and literally soak up the culture for which New Orleans is famous.
Ms. Liebel is credited with many well received reviews including the movie, "Benjamin Button," and books of the The Orphan Train Trilogy. These and others can be read on her Wordpress websites found at Sharliebel's Blogs. Journey to the M.A. Degree is a book that will inspire and encourage returning as well as new students on their journey into the world of higher education. Xlibris is the publisher and it is available in paperback and ebook at all booksellers. ###

Click Here to see more reviews about: Journey To The M.A. Degree

Those searching for motivation to return to college might considerCharlotte M. Liebel's book, JOURNEY TO THE M.A. DEGREE forcontinuing education as an adult. Although away from studies for years,any dedicated learner can study to achieve their dream to earn degreesbeginning with their first year at college. Brief previews of essays, andstudy guides for college courses that Ms. Liebel shares with readers giveunderstanding and remove the mystery of higher learning. Education hasthe building blocks for competing in the workforce on every level and inevery desired career. Learning can be taught.

Buy NowGet 7% OFF

Click here for more information about Journey To The M.A. Degree

Read More...