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An unified approach to digital watermarking
Finally!
Watermarking demistified

Earl Long
The factual counterpart to Liebling's "Earl of Louisiana."
The factual counterpart to Liebling's "Earl of Lousiana."

More Fun From MPrintsWe will eagerly look forward to seeing more from MPrints in the future.
A Work of Wondrous Imagination and Vision
White Pony's ReviewI'm proud of both Vicky Morgan-Keith's and Patrick Keith's accomplishment in the independent comic field.
Well done!
White Pony
(...)


Interesting and worth reading and seeing.The most interesting is his conviction that no money is untainted. That's interesting because it means the donations and public fundings the environmentalists take in come from no less than the evil polluters themselves, perhaps feeling, which GBS rightly agreed, as the Salvation Army would that they "...will take money from the Devil himself sooner than abandon the work of Salvation." But GBS also wrote in the preface that while he is okay to accept tainted money, "He must either share the world's guilt or go to another planet." From what I can gather from the preface and play, GBS believed money is the key to solve all the problems we have, hence his mentioning of Samuel Butler and his "constant sense of the importance of money," and his low opinion of Ruskin and Kroptokin, for whom, "law is consequence of the tendency of human beings to oppress fellow humans; it is reinforced by violence." Kropotkin also "provides evidence from the animal kingdom to prove that species which practices mutual aid multiply faster than others. Opposing all State power, he advocates the abolition of states, and of private property, and the transforming of humankind into a federation of mutual aid communities. According to him, capitalism cannot achieve full productivity, for it amis at maximum profits instead of production for human needs. All persons, including intellectuals, should practice manual labor. Goods should be distributed according to individual needs." (Guy de Mallac, The Widsom of Humankind by Leo Tolstoy.)
If GBS wasn't joking, then the following should be one of the most controversial ideas he raised in the preface to the play. I quote: "It would be far more sensible to put up with their vices...until they give more trouble than they are worth, at which point we should, with many apologies and expressions of sympathy and some generosity in complying with their last wishes, place them in the lethal chamber and get rid of them." Did he really mean that if you are a rapist once, you can be free and "put up with," but if you keep getting drunk (a vice), or slightly more seriously, stealing, you should be beheaded?
A deluge of brilliance, wit, political nonsenseLeaving the silly premise behind the play aside, Shaw has crafted a startling piece of theatre and uses his magisterial command of the English language to amuse, provoke, and amaze the audience.
comedic masterpiece

Wonderful
A marvelous little collection of lectures
Fascinating for both serious and casual readers

unsettling
Suppose we have it wrong?
Mikayla-The Second Coming by Morgan Alexander

Excellent, despite its flawsYes, it's "introductory" in nature, but it's the most comprehensive introduction I've seen to this complex and emerging field. It would make an excellent reference or textbook.
The 5-star content gets 4 stars because of the book's numerous editorial flaws. For example, several illustrations in the text reference color plate images that simply don't exist. And at least a half-dozen works cited in the text don't appear on the reference list. All-in-all, a rather slipshod editing job.
Intelligent building blocks of information vizThe only main drawback may be book quality. Only a few color plates in the center make for a visually sparse work, although there are b/w images throughout. Nevertheless, writing makes up for this fact with clear and direct language. Many of us here in the Communication Planning/Information Design grad program like it a lot.
A mast have book!

Pleasant reading material.
One of my favorite reads
Humorous but poignant western romanceIn 1882 Horseshoe, Texas, Linsey Gordon reads the signs that inform her that she has three months to live because she looked into a mirror during Bleet Haggar's wake. Though her luck may be all bad, the superstitious Linsey decides to do one last good deed before she dies. She wants to find a spouse for her sister Addie.
Linsey selects the town's workaholic, its' most eligible bachelor, Dr. Daniel Sharpe, a person who dreads having anything to do with the most superstitious person in all of Texas. Her efforts seem to backfire and places her and Daniel in several predicaments. Still, both of them soon begin to fall in love with each other, but he must convince her that the only real sign is that of love, while she must teach him to relax.
LOVING LINSEY is a humorous western romance with a moral that life is to be lived. The story line is filled with antics that entertain the reader even as the era feels authentic. The good and bad luck charms that prevail would even leave Professor Amos Fortune (Justice League foe) wondering about the future. Like her best seller, WILD CAT CAIT, Rachelle Morgan has scribed another jocular tale with a punch.
Harriet Klausner


The topics are developed in an intuitive fashion, resorting to geometric analogies whenever possible, and the proposed programming experiments (which are backed up by source code both in an appendix and on-line) allow the reader to develop valuable insights on the concepts. Watermarking with side information, message coding as well as error analysis are extensively developed. A very "juicy" chapter is devoted to the applications and motivation of digital watermarking, covering timeliness subjects such as DVD copy control and the SDMI.
Theoretical issues are left for a tiny appendix, and not much use of it is made throughout the book. This is comprehensible in a book aimed to be an unified introduction to the subject. The notation that has been introduced in the very first papers by the authors is still used and it does not seem to be appropriate to present more elaborated theoretical developments. But again, this is justified when formality is being traded off by insight development and intuitive treatment. As a last critic, since virtually the whole book is devoted to image watermarking, maybe the next editions (I hope there will be more !) of this book should include the word "image" in the title.
This book will certainly boost your understanding about background concepts and shed more light on the overlapping among different research areas in digital watermarking.