More Pages: Douglas Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100


Hospitality News November 2002
Fabulous BookAs a caterer looking to open a restaurant I also found the book very helpful. I didn't need recipes or help in sales - I needed help in running the financial aspects of my business.The chpater on computers was very helpful as well.The book is very easy to read and understand. Complicated accounting subjects are simplified, easy to understand and ( almost) fun to apply.
The books nineteen chapters cover the entire process of a restaurant start-up and ongoing management.The companion CD rom which contains all the forms is worth the modest price of the book alone. I would highly recomend this book to anyone in the industry now or who wants to get started with sound financial planning. Also the extensive resource guide in the back of the book helped me locate a manufacturer I needed a part from - I will use this book often.
A solid, no-nonsense, all-encompassing curriculum

Zaphod Beeblebrox spelled backwards is Dohpaz Xorbelebeeb
Better when read aloudWe've had the 4-volume audio set for ten years and my kids have worn it out. I highly recommend getting this as a book on tape. (Better yet- bring them out on CD!)
HELP!!! Too much SUSPENSE!!!!

If you only read one sci-fi/fantasy book - - This is it!
Truly classic material of genious proportions
Ford Perfect and Arthur Dent hilarious adventure

I cannot express how great this is.This story is told from the perspective of an 800-year-old Douglas fir in the Pacific Rain Forest. The Tree tells of its history and the many things it has seen over its lifetime, as well as the wildlife it has seen and sheltered. Each illustration is so realistic that it feels possible to reach in and touch the rocks or to actually hear the babble of tumbling water, experence the flash of lightning, and tremble at the mighty roar of a bear. Children will also enjoy finding the many tiny surprises hidden within the pictures: A Butterfly, Dragonfly, Spotted Owl, Tree Frog, Mouse, Bald Eagle, Bark Beetle, and many others.
At the end of the story, there is an informative page about the Pacific Rain Forest that impressed me a great deal. After reading that page, I asked several children what country came to mind when they heard the words rain forests. Most of them mentioned Africa and one or two said South America. They envisioned a tropical climate with hot, humid jungles, big broadleaf plants, monkeys, and brightly colored birds. None of them knew that there was such a place as the Pacific Rain Forest right here in the United States. A temperate rain forest that is cool and wet, filled mostly with cone bearing trees, and stretches along the coast from Southern Oregon to the Gulf of Alaska.
I cannot say enough good things about The Tree. I highly recommend it as a book to be treasured and reread for years to come. It entertains the reader while teaching a love for nature's delicate balance and the urgency to act now in order to save our valuable forests from disappearing forever. Read it with a child and enjoy the light in his eyes as he searches its pages for each of the tiny surprises...
The TreeThe stunning, full color, two page illustrations are a visual feast. Each illustration is richly detailed with new treasures to be seen each time you look at it.
Over 800 years, the Tree has survived the wind, fire and snow, and seen the wonder of a young owl learning how to fly, the yearly return of the salmon, and the great glaciers melting. He hears bulldozers coming and wonders if it is his time to die...but then children come and circle his trunk and save him from destruction.
Information for parents and teachers about the Pacific rain forest and the story of the Tree are included in the back of the book. A portion of the proceeds of the book will be donated to the Jane Goodall Foundation and the Circle of Life Foundation that fosters conservation and social solutions.
This is a marvelous book to enjoy with children, to be treasured and read again and again, and to inspire children to fully appreciate the wonders of nature.
The TreeTree presents the song of that giant fir.
Thirty-two gorgeously illustrated 8.5-by-11-inch pages house the story. Each doublefold spread vibrantly depicts the Olympic Rain Forest in all its glory. Replete with spotted owls, timber wolves, blacktail deer, and one very scary grizzly bear, illustrator David Danioth puts readers smack dab in the middle of the forest with his spectacular artwork of airbrush, colored-pencil, and gouache depictions. In the story, bulldozers invade the forest, and the 800-year-old fir ponders its fate. Peaceful action ultimately saves the day when people encircle the trunk to prevent the treefs demise.
A beautiful book for children or adults of any age, The Tree boasts forewords by environmental activist and author Julia Butterfly Hill (who spent more than two years living in an ancient redwood) and renowned folk singer and songwriter Pete Seeger. A portion of the profits from the bookfs sale go to Hillfs Circle of Light Foundation and to the Jane Goodall Institute. The Tree sports an eye-catching cover illustration that gives a taste of the beauty to be found inside. The book will be a welcome addition to the childrenfs or environmental sections of your shop.


Comer does it again for us! :-)
EXPLAINED IN SIMPLE TERMS
A superb beginning for basic network theory!

Really, the best way to read The HobbitI know that annotated books can be difficult to navigate, filled with useless, pointless, or just plain boring information, and can be grossly oversized. That is not the case here.
So - here's the scoop.
The original story is very nicely presented, with all original illustrations in color when possible, and in black and white elsewhere. The type is nice and clear, very easy to read. (Many cheaper editions are also rather hard on the eyes. Check the print before you buy, folks!)
The illustrations are printed very clearly, and with very good notes on what they are.
And then the annotations - useful, engaging, and very well done. You will WANT to read these. We discover how the book was written, and what was changed between editions. (There were many changes made so that The Hobbit would conform more easily to the Lord of the Rings trilogy.) There are fascinating tidbits about Tolkien's life and the experiences that made their way into the story.
The forward tells about the writing of the novel, and the appedices give additional details about the text.
There are also many illustrations from other editions of the book. These are varied, from thought-provoking to not-provoking.
And the book is not too big. Some editions are simply too big to be read, but this book is reasonably sized so that you can actually READ IT! In fact, I have not read any other edition of The Hobbit for years, since the original annotated version came out.
The new edition is very much worthwhile. Enjoy!
Excellent AnnotationsDoug Anderson includes lots of sources in his notes. He quotes Tolkien's own letters, other fairy tales and legends that may have inspired Tolkien, as well as previous versions of the section he's noting. The Gollum section ("Riddles in the Dark") is interesting. Tolkien did some tinkering with the original Gollum story as its follow-up (LORD OF THE RINGS) was taking shape. Seems that George Lucas is not the only person who's revised previously released work! Tolkien was his predecessor.
Also interesting are the many black and white illustrations that Anderson includes, many from foreign editions of THE HOBBIT. Some of the art is hilarious, as it does not resemble Tolkien's characters at all! There is a nice color section of illustrations in the center of the book.
THE ANNOTATED HOBBIT is a handsome, interesting book to own if you're a fan of Bilbo and his adventures with the dwarves (or dwarfs? That's covered in the book as well!)
As Good As It GetsIncluded are Hobbit illustrations around the word, a rich addition, but the real joy of this book is learning background and details about The Hobbit, author J.R.R. Tolkien and The Lord Of The Rings. At times the footnotes are scholarly and at other times they are amusing gems.
Anderson has compared all of Tolkien's revisions and has researched the 'whys' 'hows' and 'whens' that helps reveal to reader the meaning of the text and the personality of the author.
My favorites are anecdotes about Tolkien's personal life that involve his family and personal history. They are facinating and at times touching.
WIthout rambling on too much, I can confidently recommend this version of "The Hobbit" as the best available.


A great addition to your library
A thoroughly believable, beautiful hell
Oh... HELL!Although Barlowe's searing INFERNO imagery is rendered in a somewhat less photographic, more "painterly" style than his earlier books I have, it's dead-on target for depicting this eternally skin-crawling, hyper-grotesque netherworld. Helpfully described by a sort of narrative text, the twisted inhabitants of Barlowe's raging nightmarescapes purposefully go about their unending torments with skull-shredding focus: their horrors make bizarre sense.
I first went through this visually and spiritually cacophonous, masterful work on Christmas day. What contrast: listening to carols about angels from Heaven, while staring at demon-shrieking souls in Hell.
Final note; don't miss the deliciously caustic JUSTITIA OMNIBUS at the bottom of page 2.


A great book for your imagination!
Can't write but he can sure paintWhen leafing through the D-IV book, set aside your preconceptions about alien worlds and let it sink in. Surely, real alien life will be even stranger, but the stuff in this book is already transcendental for 99% of earthlings. Barlowe scrutinously studies his own preconceptions, exorcizes them and dreams up weird alternatives.
Good news he's busy with a sequel, and I bet that's gonna be even better. Let's hope he get's someone else to write the explanatory sidebars.
Excellent faux-exobiology field guide!

Excellent explanation of ACE and C++ network programmingof volume 1, of doing an excellent job of explaining how to
program robust network software in C++ using the ACE framework.
The book is well-structured, and easy to read. Each section explains:
- the general concepts associated with a specific network programming
topic, for example reactive event loops, or asynchronous I/O
- the underlying operating system API's associated with each topic, for
example, for reactive event loops, the Unix select()
or the Windows WaitForMultipleObjects() calls
- the underlying design patterns for properly using these facilities,
such as the Reactor, Proactor, Service Configurator
- and the accompanying C++ class in ACE for using this design pattern
The text and code examples are very clear and easy to follow.
I particularly like the technique of using sidebars throughout the
text, which draws your attention to particularly interesting
nuggets of information.
My favorite parts of this book were the parts which covered in depth three
of the most core concepts in the ACE framework:
- the Reactor (reactive event loops),
- the Proactor (using asynchronous I/O for dispatching events),
- the ACE_Task (using concurrency/multithreading efficiently in an
object-oriented fashion)
Understanding these core concepts is essential for building
high-performance middleware and networked software. These concepts
were used extensively by Schmidt, when his team used ACE to build
The ACE ORB (TAO), a C++ CORBA implementation, so this book
will help with understanding some of the internal implementation
details of TAO.
For new users of ACE, this book is a good introduction, alongside volume 1.
For experienced users of ACE, this book is an excellent
refresher, and concisely explains many core ACE concepts, accompanied
with illustrative examples. This book will make an
excellent addition to the bookshelf of anyone serious
about C++ network programming.
Essential for Serious ACE UsersThis book has definitely helped me in getting my head around the Reactor, Acceptor/Connector and Task patterns, since these are the patterns that I most actively use in ACE. It has also exposed me to several other patterns that I haven't had a chance to use yet.
If you're doing network programming in C++, and aren't using ACE, it's well worth looking into. The reoccurring patterns used in designing and implementing networked applications are all contained in the ACE framework -- and as a huge bonus -- platform independence (support for most popular operating systems) is built in with ACE's wrapper facades. Also, the ACE open-source community is actively enhancing and improving the framework, so it just keeps getting better and better.
The challenge with any good framework, is learning how to harness what's provided in it. C++ Network Programming Volume 2 goes a long way towards that end and both it and Volume 1 are essential for any developer serious about using the ACE framework.
Open-Source Framework Facilitates Network Programmingsystems and languages looks like it should be easy, but it
is emphatically not. The nave designer of networked
applications will encounter a thicket of problems including
lack of portability, distributed performance bottlenecks,
maintaining correctness during shutdown, and managing
recovery from partial failures.
"C++ Network Programming, Volume 2, Systematic Reuse with
ACE and Frameworks" by Douglas Schmidt and Stephen Huston
provides some powerful help in the design and implementation
of networked applications. This help comes in the form of
several frameworks.
A few words about the definition of "framework." The first
step up from writing applications that interface directly
with operating systems is to insert object-oriented wrappers
between the application and lower level services. These
wrappers are classes that encapsulate the low level,
functionally specified, services such as operating systems
and protocol stacks. This first step was taken in the
predecessor volume to the present book, "C++ Network
Programming, Volume 1: Mastering Complexity with ACE and
Patterns", by the same authors, where a collection of
wrappers, called the ACE wrappers, is provided that not only
raises the level of the application interface from
functional to object-oriented, but also provides portability
at the same time.
For example, consider an application that directly uses
sockets. This application would depend on the syntax and
functional details of that operating system's s operating
system's socket implementation. By inserting the ACE
wrappers, the application acquires an object interface to
socket capabilities, and in addition becomes portable across
a large number of compilers, operating systems, and
communication protocols.
But a set of wrapper classes does not solve the networked
application designer's problems, any more than a pile of
bricks is a house.
Frameworks, which are the subject of the present book, are
the next step up in power from wrappers. A framework is an
integrated set of classes into which application designers
plug code that is unique to their applications. The
frameworks described in the present book handle a large part
of the difficulty inherent in network programming, leaving
application designers to deal primary with their
applications' local functionality.
For example, one of the frameworks described in the book is
the Acceptor-Connector Framework. This framework relieves
the user of dealing with the numerous tricky details
inherent in the conceptually simple process of connecting
clients with servers, such as address formats, protocols,
initialization, and message queue locking.
Readers should be aware that the present book is not a
general-purpose text on network programming using C++; this
book is a focused exposition of the ACE frameworks. Readers
will be most comfortable reading this book if they are
already familiar with software design and architecture
patterns, including those described in "Pattern-Oriented
Software Architecture: Patterns for Concurrent and Networked
Objects, Volume 2" by Douglas Schmidt et al, and in the
famous Gang of Four book: "Design Patterns: Elements of
Reusable Object-Oriented Software" by Eric Gamma et al.
The large amount of code that implements the wrappers of
volume 1 and the frameworks of volume 2 is available for
download for free. This code is in wide use today.
Designers of networked applications, when offered a large
pile of code that purports to do a lot of what needs to be
done, must trade off the anticipated saving in design and
implementation time against the anticipated time to
understand what the offered code is intended to do and what
it actually does. This tradeoff can lead a reasonable
designer to ignore existing code in favor of hand-writing an
entire application. In the case of the ACE wrappers and
frameworks, as documented and explained by the two books
mentioned here, combined with the open-source nature of the
implementing code and its widespread employment in real
applications, make the result of this tradeoff pretty clear:
read the books, use the code.


Barlowe's Guide to Extraterrestrials
Fully colored aliens let you enjoy the book.
A modern classic