

flying under false colors
Excellent Tutorial

Organization is a Problem
A good introductory text

Its okay but not mind blowing.

Data Mining put in contextIt's a good book if you want to have an overview of data mining and get some ideas about how to use it and it covers a quite a broad perspective and is very much uptodate. I would maybe have prefered a book which was more like a reference guide for practical every-day-use.


Hope and Determination

A solid introduction to Distance Learning

Interesting but fragmentary look at the Indian WarsI purchased this book because my greatgrandfather was a colleague of Coates, serving in the Medical Department at various frontier posts at the same time. I hoped to see some insight into the duties of an Army surgeon on the Plains, but I was very disappointed that there were almost no references to his medical work.


Decent book for the casual enthusiast but poorly researched

Room for improvementBut it helps to get the mind in "test mode" which is a good thing. And you can learn from it.
Nothing like the real test...
An adequate supplement to study for exam

25% of what I expected..buy it on the bargain table!
Some brilliant ideas, some wild digressionsTo summarize, Hancock theorizes that the end of the Great Ice Age ended with vast areas of precious real estate innundated by seawater. These often were coastal cities settled by civilized members of the Indus, Japanese, Maya and other cultural groups. The theory makes a great deal of sense, especially in light of the amazing findings a Russian submarine research vehicle has been finding off the coast of Cuba.
Surely, all combined, the vast, lost areas of Africa, South Ameerica, Asia and other continents could more than make up for a lost Atlantis. So, Hancock dives, searching for a lost civilization that all that traditional archeologists have ignored.
This is fine work, until Hancock gets bogged down with incredible details. We slog through a boring discussion of whether molars on Malta were Neolithic or not. We meander around India, never quite getting to the bottom of what lay between Ceylon and the mainland. Hancock swims over the famous Bimini Road in the Bahamas only to leave undecided whether the formation is natural or man-made.
To make matters worse, the usually fine photographs by Hancock's wife Santha Faiia are so murky and indistinct that it's impossible to make up one's own mind.
Hancock's done an impressive bit of scholarship here. And I'm glad he's dropped his previous pet notion that Antarctica was Atlantis that somehow "slipped" to the bottom of the planet. I only wish the book weren't so mired in trivia and digression. A good editor could have trimmed this book by more than half and produced an exciting, revealing work of nonfiction.
An addictive read