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Fun and entertaining book!
Funny stuffIf nothing else, Boyd Geary is one sexy [person]. If that's not reason enough to buy this book, I don't know what is.
Venus and Mars Starter Kit

A must have for QOS on Windows
Excellent bookI highly recommend it for anybody who is working in the IP networking environment.
Network QoS and Windos OS -The beginning of the book contains the requisite presentation of QoS queuing mechanisms, and IETF work in both the Integrated and Differentiated Services areas. There is also a good discussion on the issues surrounding policy management in QoS enabled networks.
However this books' primary value (and worth its price alone,) are
1) it's discussion of the Quality of Service implementation on the Microsoft Windows 2000 platform. It is essential for anyone developing and hosting QoS enabled applications on the Windows platform. It provides in-depth discussion of the Windows Generic QoS API, QoS Service provider, as well as the traffic control API, and traffic control components including a great discussion on the internal queuing for QoS enabled applications. In the final chapter, the author covers Microsoft value added services for Quality of Service with a discussion of the Access Control Server (ACS) and Subnet Bandwidth Manager(SBM).
2) the authors' intimate knowledge and vision really show with his introduction of a Quality/Efficiency Product (or Q/E product) for QoS enabled networks. This idea is outlined in chapter two, and further referenced in threads throughout the remaining chapters of the book and provides a measurement tool for determining the efficiency of the network over differing QoS mechanisms. The Q/E product - if automated - would go a long way to providing networks with dynamic tools for near real-time QoS provisioning processes inside the network. The Q/E product could provide the foundation on which policy automation and dynamic resource reconfiguration could take place. The Q/E product for a network could be adjusted when promoting applications into or demoting applications out of the QoS space in a network. The impacts of which would be known to existing network SLA's. Although this idea is in its infancy, it provides food for thought to those doing future network research and development in the area of QoS tools and automation.
I highly recommend this book to Networking Engineers, Application and Network Developers, as well as Network Performance and Management planners.


Getting To Know Virginia
An Eccentric CEOIn Never Ask Permission, Mary Buford Hitz tackles this daunting task head on, the subject of this memoir being her mother, Elizabeth Scott Bocock or, as she often signed herself, ESB. Rather than take a sequential, "I-am-born" approach, the author chooses to devote separate chapters to different aspects of her mother's personality, each chapter a self-contained essay, overflowing with anecdotes, quotes, and, perhaps most illuminating of all, snippets of ESB's autobiographical sketches. (Most of these autobiographical excerpts, by the way, come from essays ESB wrote during her college years, which began after her sixty-seventh birthday.) Just as a puzzle becomes a picture as each piece falls into place, so does ESB's complex character come into focus, chapter by chapter, with a poignant, but essential clue to this charming, but undeniably complex Virginian saved until the very end.
Many CEO's could learn from ESB's capacity to set goals and achieve them. As ESB emerges from the pages of this lovingly crafted book, the reader meets a determined and creative thinker who probably would not have been impressed with "left-brain/right-brain, lateral thinking, creative problem-solving, if you aren't part of the solution, you're part of the problem" lingo, but who embodied the positive persona such jargon seeks to describe. With one foot firmly planted in late Victorian America and the other constantly, restlessly forcing her into the future, she was a visionary with an astonishing ability to get things done.
If you enjoy biography, if you are fascinated by Virginia, if you want some side-splitting laughs, or if you are just interested in a good read, this is the book for you.
What a Goose Chase!

Feels like a classic
This book made me think and feel...fine stories and dialogue> Scott Lucado is simulataneously bold but humble,
> sassy
> but wise, light and heavy as he provokes the reader
> to
> think and feel about the meanings of life, death and
> time. Psychologists and philosophers are likely to
> find a useful story here somewhere---so will
> plumbers
> and musicians and teachers of all flavors. Scott is
> perceptive, revealing and amusing in the way he
> writes
> light dialogue that covers deep subjects of religion
> and spirituality. A Christian lens is clearly
> visible,
> but I am not Christian and still found the stories
> and
> ideas interesting and accessible. This is a keeper
> for
> me.
Thought-provoking

Easy to understand
This is a wonderful informational book!! :)
Must-have book for coin enthusiasts and collectors.

Very concise
Open and Innocent
A Peace That Depends On Nothing

Outer Space Fun
What a Trip
Fabulous!

Ah, good ol' sci-fi...This novel in particular I was pleased with because of its historical accuracy to the Renaissance period while being unafraid to drop in a bit of alien involvement here and there. The main character, John Dee, is also particularly endearing. While he's easily recognizable as the protagonist and the one who is supposed to "save the world" (such as it is) he's still a bit of a scoundrel and a villain. I would, without a doubt, recommend this novel.
Classic science fiction adventure!
The Merchant Prince Rules

Make Your Mark
A superbly presented & highly recommended business reference
Microbranding will become the new buzz word of 2002!In my business (and my personal life), I have found that we often complicate issues until they either become too big to tackle or lost in the confusion. In MicroBranding, Mr. Gross clearly explains that this need not be the case when building a personal or local brand. Using real-world examples, he illustrates that building a powerful microbrand is both attainable and necessary. Understanding that you simply do not need a global brand to compete in your niche is one of the powerful pieces of information I gained from reading this book.


A good read even for us non-fishing types
Bowen captures the essence of fishing
Big Fish