From : Fionnula
![]() |
this is a real good family book, for children and parents of all ages. great fun exposture to physics affect our lifes. it is very practical concept, not the lofty phd theory kind. a lot of energy and passion in the reader.
█░█ Audio Length: 4 hours and 19 min. █░█ █░█ this is a real good family book, for children and parents of all ages. great fun exposture to physics affect our lifes. it is very practical concept, not the lofty phd theory kind. a lot of energy and passion in the reader. █░█ Audio Length: 4 hours and 19 min. █░█ █░█ █░█ ███ The language and imagery couldn't be clearer in this lesson on how █░█ █░█ quantum physics influences personal change. Though the concept of █░█ █░█ personal change being integrated with the universe can be elusive, █░█ █░█ Wolf's practical grasp of these ideas makes them accessible and █░█ █░█ exciting. Wolf's own passion adds to the enjoyment in this █░█ █░█ spirited and apparently spontaneous talk. Sure, he's over the top █░█ █░█ with his energy and the campy packaging, but his clarity and █░█ █░█ accessibility will render meaning and enlightenment for listeners █░█ █░█ in any age range. This is a highly recommended introduction to the █░█ █░█ quantum physics perspective of personal control. T.W. █░█ █░█ ███ ███░ ▌iNSTALL NOTES■███ ███░ ░ ░█░█ █▒█░ 1. Unrar and Burn to cd or Mount ███ ███░ 2. Enjoy ░█░█(more) (less) |
From : Viet
![]() |
RF and Microwave Engineering is one of the fastest growth areas of the past decade and will probably continue to be a very active area of research and application in a large variety of fields. The six volume set of Encyclopedia of RF and Microwave Engineering illustrates how this field has been the key to enabling technology responsible for the phenomenal growth of wireless communications. This se
RF and Microwave Engineering is one of the fastest growth areas of the past decade and will probably continue to be a very active area of research and application in a large variety of fields. The six volume set of Encyclopedia of RF and Microwave Engineering illustrates how this field has been the key to enabling technology responsible for the phenomenal growth of wireless communications. This set also examines how RF and microwave engineering continues to have great influence as the technology behind such important applications as radar, remote sensing, remote control, sensors, navigation, surveillance, electronic warfare, radiometers, plasma research, and imaging.
A/D and D/A Conversion Architectures and Techniques. Acoustic Microwave Devices. Active Antennas. Active Filters: Overview of Active Filter Structures. Active Filters: Tools and Techniques for Active Filter Design. Adaptive Array Antennas. Altimeters. Amplitude Shift Keying. Analytical and Adaptive Modeling of Nonlinear High Power Amplifiers. Anisotropy and Bianisotropy. Antenna Accessories. Antenna Anechoic Chambers . Antenna Arrays for Mobile Communications. Antenna Compact Range. Antenna Feeds. Antenna Parameters. Antenna Radiation Patterns. Antenna Reverberation Chamber. Antenna Scanning Arrays. Antenna Testing and Measurements. Antenna Theory. Antennas. Antennas for High-Frequency Broadcasting. Antennas for Medium-Frequency Broadcasting. Antennas for Mobile Communications. Aperture Antennas. Application of Wavelets to Electromagnetic Problems. Applied Numerical Electromagnetic Analysis for Planar High Frequency Circuits. Artificial Magnetic Conductor. Attenuation Measurement. Attenuators. Backscatter. Bandpass Filters. Bandstop Filters. BiCMOS Devices and RF Integrated Circuits. Biological Effects of Radiofrequency Energy as Related to Health and Safety. Boundary-Value Problems. Buried Object Detection. Calibration of a Circular Loop Antenna. Capacitance Extraction. Cavity Resonators. Cellular Radio. Chebyshev Filters. Chirality. Circuit Stability. Circuit Tuning. Circular Waveguides. Coaxial Line Discontinuities. Coaxial Lines and Waveguides. Comb-Line Filters. Complex Media. Computational Electromagnetic Scattering Models for Microwave Remote Sensing. Conformal Antennas. Conformal Mapping Techniques. Conical Antennas. Coplanar Stripline (CPS) Components. Coplanar Stripline Transitions. Coplanar Waveguide (CPW) Transmission Lines. Coplanar Waveguide Components. Corrugated Horn Antennas. Coupled Transmission Lines. Cryogenic Electronics. Dielectric Loaded Antennas. Dielectric Measurement. Dielectric Permittivity and Loss. Dielectric Resonator Antennas. Dielectric Resonator Filters. Dielectric Resonator Oscillators. Dielectric Resonators. Digital Microwave Receivers. Digital Radio. Diodes. Dipole Antennas and Arrays. Direct Satellite Television Broadcasting. Direction of Arrival Estimation and Adaptive Processing Using a Conformal Phased Array. Directional Couplers. Directive Antennas. Distributed Amplifiers. Dual- and Multi-Frequency Microstrip Antennas. Electromagnetic Bandgap Assisted Bandpass Filters. Electromagnetic Compatibility. Electromagnetic Ferrite Tile Absorber. Electromagnetic Field Computation in Planar Multilayers. Electromagnetic Field Measurement. Electromagnetic Inverse Problems. Electromagnetic Materials. Electromagnetic Modeling. Electromagnetic Shielding. Electromagnetic Subsurface Remote Sensing. Electromagnetic Surface Waves. Electromagnetic Wave Propagation. Electromagnetic Wave Scattering. Electromagnetic Waves in Ionosphere. Electromagnetics, Time-Domain. Electronic Warfare. Elliptic Filters. Enhancements of the Finite Difference Time Domain Method. Fabry-Perot Resonators. Fast Fourier Transforms and NUFFT. Feedback Amplifiers. Feedback Oscillators. Feedforward Amplifiers. Ferrite Circulators. Ferrite Isolators. Ferrite Loaded Waveguides. Ferrite Phase Shifters. Ferroelectric Materials. Filter Synthesis. Filter Theory. Finite Element Analysis. Finite-Difference Time-Domain Analysis. Finline Components. Finlines. Fractal Shaped Antennas: A Review. Frequency Converters and Mixers. Frequency Independent Antennas. Frequency Modulation. Frequency Selective Surfaces. Frequency Stability. Frequency Standards, Characterization. Frequency Synthesizers. Frequency-Division Multiplexers. Frequency-Domain Circuit Analysis. Friis Free-Space Transmission Formula. Galerkin Method (Rayleigh-Ritz Method). Gallium Arsenide Technology and Applications. Gallium Nitride for Electronics. Generalized Scattering Matrix Technique. Geometrical Optics. Ge-Si Alloys and Devices. Gratings, Grating Antennas. Green's Function Methods. Ground Penetrating Radar. Guided Electromagnetic Waves. Gunn or Transferred-Electron Devices and Circuits. Gyrators. Gyrotrons. Hankel Transforms. Harmonics Oscillators, Circuits. Helical Antennas. Helmholtz Equations. Heterojunction Bipolar Transistor. Heterostructures Devices. High-Field Effects. High-Frequency Broadcasting. High-Frequency Transmission Lines. High-Temperature Superconductors. History of Wireless Communication. Horn Antennas. HTS Film Growth. Hybrid CAD Techniques. Hybrids and Couplers. III-V Semiconductors. IMPATT Diodes and Circuits. Impedance Transformers and Matching Networks. Indium Phosphide (InP). Integral Equations. Integrated Antenna Systems. Integrated Circuits. Integro-Differential Equations. Intermediate-Frequency Amplifiers. Intermodulation. Intermodulation Measurement. Iterative Methods. ITS Radio Service Standards and Wireless Access in Vehicular Environments (ITS-WAVE) at 5.9GHz. Klystron. Leaky Modes and High-Frequency Effects in Microwave Integrated Circuits. Leaky Wave Antennas. Left-Handed Materials for Microwave Devices and Circuits. Lens Antennas. Linear Antennas. Local Area Networks (LAN). Loop Antennas. Low Noise Amplifiers. Low Noise Amplifiers. Low Temperature Co-Fired Ceramic (LTCC) Technology in RF and Microwave Engineering. Low-Pass Filters. Low-Power Broadcasting. Magnetic Field Measurement. Magnetic Materials. Magnetic Microwave Devices. Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Magnetic Shielding. Magnetrons. Maxwellian Circuits. Measurement of Near Fields Using a Modulated Scatterer. Medical Imaging with Microwave: Thermoacoustic Tomography. MEI Method. Method of Lines. Method of Moments. Microstrip Antenna Arrays. Microstrip Antennas. Microstrip Antennas, Broadband. Microstrip Antennas, Compact. Microstrip Circuits. Microstrip Lines. Microstrip Transitions. Microwave and Radio Frequency Multipliers. Microwave Circuits. Microwave Detectors. Microwave Ferroelectric Devices. Microwave Filters. Microwave Heating. Microwave Integrated Circuits. Microwave Isolators. Microwave Limiters. Microwave Measurements. Microwave Mixers. Microwave Oscillators. Microwave Parametric Amplifiers. Microwave Phase Shifters. Microwave Photonics: Technological Evolutions and Its Applications. Microwave Power Amplifiers. Microwave Power Transmission. Microwave Receivers. Microwave Resonance Plasma Source. Microwave Scattering Models for Earth Terrain. Microwave Solid-State Devices. Microwave Superconductor Devices. Microwave Switches. Microwave Tubes. Military Communication. Millimeter-Wave Integrated Circuits. Millimeter-Wave Measurement. MIMO Systems for Wireless Communications. Miniaturized Packaged (Embedded) Antennas for Portable Wireless Devices. Missile Guidance. Mixed-Signal CMOS RF Integrated Circuits. Mixer Circuits. Mobile Communication. Mobile Radio Channels. Mobile Satellite Communications. Mode-Matching Methods. Modulation Doped FETs. Monolithic Antennas. Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuits (MMICs). Monopole Antennas. Monopulse Tracking Systems. Monte Carlo Analysis. Monte Carlo Simulation in Reliability. MOSFET Modeling. Multibeam Antennas. Multiconductor Transmission Lines. Multimode Equivalent Network Representations. Multiple Access Schemes. Multiplexers. Multi-Resolution Techniques. Negative Resistance. Neural Networks for Microwave Circuits. Noise and Interference Modeling. Noise Generators. Noise, High-Frequency. Noise, Hot Carrier Effects. Noise, Low Frequency. Nonlinear Circuit Analysis. Nonlinear Circuit Design. Notch Antennas. Orthomode Transducers. Oscillator Design. Packaging RF Devices and Modules. Parallel Algorithms and Computing for Large-Scale Electromagnetic Simulation. Parameter Estimation from Electromagnetic Simulations Using Signal Models. Passivation. Periodic Structures. Permittivity and Measurements. Personal Area Networking with Bluetooth. Perturbation Theory. Phase Locked Loops. Phase Locked Oscillators and Frequency Synthesizers. Phase Noise and Measurements. Phase Shifters. Photonic Band Gap (PBG). Piezoelectric Transducer Controlled Circuits. Piezoelectricity. PIN Diodes. Power Combiners and Dividers. Preamplifiers. Printed Inductors. Pulse Compression. Pulse-Shaping Circuits. Q-Factor. Q-Factor Measurements. Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK). Quasi-Optical Circuits. Radar Altimetry. Radar Antennas. Radar Applications. Radar Cross-Section. Radar Equipment. Radar Imaging. Radar Polarimetry. Radar Remote Sensing (changed from "Remote Sensing by Radar"). Radar Remote Sensing of Irregular Stratified Layers. Radar Signal Detection. Radar Signal Processing . Radar Target Recognition. Radar Tracking. Radiation Effects. Radiation Monitoring. Radio Broadcast Studio Equipment. Radio Direction Finding. Radio Navigation. Radio Noise. Radio on Fiber Systems (RoF Systems). Radio Reception. Radio-Frequency Identification Systems (RFID). Radio-Frequency Integrated Circuits. Radiometry. Radiotelemetry. Radiowave Propagation Concepts. Radiowave Propagation Ground Effects. Radiowave Propagation in Multipath Channels. Reconfigurable Antennas. Rectifying Antennas (Rectennas). Reflectarray Antenna. Reflectometers, Time-Domain. Reflector Antennas (Parobolic Antennas, Dish Antennas). Refraction and Attenuation in Troposphere. Resonant Tunneling Diodes. Retrodirective Systems. RF Circuit Noise. RF/Wireless Packaging. Ring Circuits and Resonators. Rough Surface Scattering: Numerical Simulations and Applications in Microwave Remote Sensing. Satellite Antennas. Schottky Barrier Diodes and Their Applications. Schottky Barriers. SiC Device Technologies. Signal Fading in Radio Communications . Silicon-Germanium. Six-Port Networks. Skin Effect. Sky Wave Propagation at Low Frequencies. Sky Wave Propagation at Medium and High Frequencies. Slot Antennas. Slotline Components. Slotlines. Slow Wave Structures. Small Antennas. Smart Materials. Smith Chart. Spaceborne Radar. Spatial and Quasi-Optical Power Combining. SPICE. Spiral Antennas. SQUIDs. Stability of Nonlinear Systems. Standing Wave Meters and Network Analyzers. Strip Transmission Lines. Stripline Components. Submarine Antennas. Superconducting Cavity Resonators. Superconducting Electromagnets. Superconducting Filters and Passive Components. Superconducting Microwave Technology. Surface Acoustic Wave Applications. Surface Acoustic Wave Delay Lines. Surface Acoustic Wave Devices. Surface Acoustic Wave Filters. Surface Mount Technology. Synthetic Aperture Radar. Target Tracking. Telemedicine. Telemetry. Television and FM Broadcasting Antennas. Television Antennas. Television Broadcast Transmission Standards. Terahertz Science, Engineering and Systems - from Space to Earth Applications. The Coulomb Gauge in Electromagnetics . Thermal Analysis and Design of Electronic Systems. Thin Film Resistors. Thin Films. Transceivers. Transient Analysis. Transmission Line Matrix (TLM) Method. Transmission Line Theory. Transmission Lines and Parameters. Transmitters for Analog Television. Transmitters for Digital Television. Transmitters for FM Broadcasting. Transverse Resonance Techniques. Traveling Wave Antennas. Traveling Wave Tubes. Tunnel Devices. UHF Receivers. Ultra-Wideband Radio. Ultra-Wideband Wireless Systems. Underground Propagation. Uniform Geometrical Theory of Diffraction. Van Atta Array Reflector. Variable-Frequency Oscillators. Very High Frequency Range. Voltage-to-Frequency Converters. Volterra Modeling in Analog, RF and Microwave Engineering. Waveguide Antennas. Waveguide Components. Waveguide Directional Couplers. Waveguide Discontinuities. Waveguide Junctions. Waveguide Oscillators. Waveguides. Wavelength Meter. Wavelet Transforms. Wavelets. Wideband Amplifiers. Wideband Slot and Printed Antennas. Wireless Communication Systems. Yagi -Uda Antenna.(more) (less) |
From : Chroma
![]() |
davinci is the man. i don't know if he was all that smart, but after reading the book, il earnt a bunch of tricks about observation and looking at things. i think it is not really about how to think like leonard davinci, but more about learn a system to explore your already existing and underused functions
Product Description: Genius is made, not born. And human beings are g davinci is the man. i don't know if he was all that smart, but after reading the book, il earnt a bunch of tricks about observation and looking at things. i think it is not really about how to think like leonard davinci, but more about learn a system to explore your already existing and underused functions Product Description: Genius is made, not born. And human beings are gifted with an almost unlimited potential for learning and creativity. Now you can uncover your own hidden abilities, sharpen your senses, and liberate your unique intelligence--by following the example of the greatest genius of all time, Leonardo da Vinci. Acclaimed author Michael J. Gelb, who has helped thousands of people expand their minds to accomplish more than they ever thought possible, shows you how. Drawing on Da Vinci's notebooks, inventions, and legendary works of art, Gelb introduces Seven Da Vincian Principles--the essential elements of genius--from curiosità , the insatiably curious approach to life to connessione, the appreciation for the interconnectedness of all things. With Da Vinci as your inspiration, you will discover an exhilarating new way of thinking. And step-by-step, through exercises and provocative lessons, you will harness the power--and awesome wonder--of your own genius, mastering such life-changing abilities as:(more) (less) |
From : Jalila
![]() |
the cisco certification test(CCNA) is a real bitch, and it only gets harder. i used this stuff to help with mine. it is sort of like a good cheat book, but still a lot of hardwork , you can't escape that.
on server most o fthe time, sharing hope this helps you guys Note: Now study hard 'lazy-heads' coz' this latest exam the cisco certification test(CCNA) is a real bitch, and it only gets harder. i used this stuff to help with mine. it is sort of like a good cheat book, but still a lot of hardwork , you can't escape that. on server most o fthe time, sharing hope this helps you guys Note: Now study hard 'lazy-heads' coz' this latest exam (640-802) is harder than the earlier one (640-801). Paperback: 1008 pages Publisher: John Wiley & Sons; 6th Edition edition (29 Aug 2007) Language English ISBN-10: 0470110082 ISBN-13: 978-0470110089 5594 5595 Book Description Completely Revised for the New 2007 Version of the CCNA Exam (#640-802) Cisco networking authority Todd Lammle has completely updated this new edition to cover all of the exam objectives for the latest version of the CCNA exam. Todd's straightforward style provides lively examples, easy-to-understand analogies, and real-world scenarios that will not only help you prepare for the exam, but also give you a solid foundation as a Cisco networking professional. Packed with updated topics that have been added to the 2007 version of the CCNA exam, this updated study guide features expanded coverage of key topic areas plus new material on switching, network address translation, and OSPF. Inside, find the complete instruction you need, including: *Full coverage of all exam objectives in a systematic approach, so you can be confident you're getting the instruction you need for the exam *Practical hands-on exercises and labs to reinforce critical skills, *Real-world scenarios that put what you've learned in the context of actual job roles *Challenging review questions in each chapter to prepare you for exam day *Exam Essentials, a key feature in each chapter that identifies critical areas you must become proficient in before taking the exam *CD-ROM Includes: *Chapter Review Questions *Four Full-Length Practice Exams *200 Electronic Flashcards *Audio and Video Instruction from Todd Lammle *Full book in searchable PDF format Synopsis This book is completely revised for the New 2007 Version of the CCNA Exam ( numbered 640 802), Cisco networking authority. Todd Lammle has completely updated this new edition to cover all of the exam objectives for the latest version of the CCNA exam. Todd's straightforward style provides lively examples, easy to understand analogies, and real world scenarios that will not only help you prepare for the exam, but also give you a solid foundation as a Cisco networking professional. Packed with updated topics that have been added to the 2007 version of the CCNA exam, this updated study guide features expanded coverage of key topic areas plus new material on switching, network address translation, and OSPF.Inside, find the complete instruction you need, including: full coverage of all exam objectives in a systematic approach, so you can be confident you're getting the instruction you need for the exam; practical hands on exercises and labs to reinforce critical skills, real world scenarios that put what you've learned in the context of actual job roles; challenging review questions in each chapter to prepare you for exam day; and, exam essentials, a key feature in each chapter that ide Table of Contents Introduction Assessment Test Chapter 1 Internetworking Internetworking Basics Internetworking Models The Layered Approach Advantages of Reference Models The OSI Reference Model The Application Layer The Presentation Layer The Session Layer The Transport Layer The Network Layer The Data Link Layer The Physical Layer Ethernet Networking Half- and Full-Duplex Ethernet Ethernet at the Data Link Layer Ethernet at the Physical Layer Ethernet Cabling Straight-Through Cable Crossover Cable Rolled Cable Data Encapsulation The Cisco Three-Layer Hierarchical Model The Core Layer The Distribution Layer The Access Layer Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 1 Written Lab 1.1: OSI Questions Written Lab 1.2: Defining the OSI Layers and Devices Written Lab 1.3: Identifying Collision and Broadcast Domains Written Lab 1.4: Binary/Decimal/Hexadecimal Conversion Review Questions Answers to Review Questions xii Table of Contents Chapter 2 Introduction to TCP/IP TCP/IP and the DoD Model The Process/Application Layer Protocols The Host-to-Host Layer Protocols The Internet Layer Protocols IP Addressing IP Terminology The Hierarchical IP Addressing Scheme Private IP Addresses Broadcast Addresses Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 2 Review Questions Answers to Review Questions Answers to Written Lab 2 Chapter 3 Subnetting, Variable Length Subnet Masks (VLSMs), and Troubleshooting TCP/IP Subnetting Basics IP Subnet-Zero How to Create Subnets Subnet Masks Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) Subnetting Class C Addresses Subnetting Class B Addresses Subnetting Class A Addresses Variable Length Subnet Masks (VLSMs) VLSM Design Implementing VLSM Networks Summarization Troubleshooting IP Addressing Determining IP Address Problems Summary Exam Essentials Written Labs 3 Written Lab 3.1: Written Subnet Practice #1 Written Lab 3.2: Written Subnet Practice Written Lab 3.3: Written Subnet Practice Table of Contents xiii Review Questions Answers to Review Questions Answers to Written Lab 3.1 Answers to Written Lab 3.2 Answers to Written Lab 3.3 Chapter 4 Cisco’s Internetworking Operating System (IOS) and Security Device Manager (SDM) 171 The IOS User Interface 173 Cisco Router IOS 173 Connecting to a Cisco Router 173 Bringing Up a Router 175 Command-Line Interface (CLI) 179 Entering the CLI from a Non-ISR Router 180 Overview of Router Modes 181 CLI Prompts 182 Editing and Help Features 185 Gathering Basic Routing Information 189 Router and Switch Administrative Configurations 191 Hostnames 191 Banners Setting Passwords 194 Encrypting Your Passwords 199 Descriptions 201 Router Interfaces Bringing Up an Interface 206 Viewing, Saving, and Erasing Configurations 212 Deleting the Configuration and Reloading the Router 214 Verifying Your Configuration 214 Cisco’s Security Device Manager (SDM) 223 Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 4 Hands-on Labs Hands-on Lab 4.1: Logging into a Router 235 Hands-on Lab 4.2: Using the Help and Editing Features 236 Hands-on Lab 4.3: Saving a Router Configuration 237 Hands-on Lab 4.4: Setting Your Passwords 237 Hands-on Lab 4.5: Setting the Hostname, Descriptions, IP Address, and Clock Rate 239 Hands-on Lab 4.6: Installing SDM on Your Computer 241 Review Questions 242 Answers to Review Questions 247 Answers to Written Lab 4 249 xiv Table of Contents Chapter 5 Managing a Cisco Internetwork The Internal Components of a Cisco Router 252 The Router Boot Sequence 253 Managing Configuration Register 254 Understanding the Configuration Register Bits 254 Checking the Current Configuration Register Value 256 Changing the Configuration Register 256 Recovering Passwords 258 Boot System Commands 261 Backing Up and Restoring the Cisco IOS 262 Verifying Flash Memory 263 Backing Up the Cisco IOS 264 Restoring or Upgrading the Cisco Router IOS 265 Using the Cisco IOS File System (Cisco IFS) 266 Using the SDM to Manage the Flash Memory 270 Backing Up and Restoring the Cisco Configuration 274 Backing Up the Cisco Router Configuration 275 Restoring the Cisco Router Configuration 276 Erasing the Configuration 277 Using the Cisco IOS File System to Manage Your Router’s Configuration (Cisco IFS) 278 Using the SDM to Back Up/Restore and Edit the Router’s Configuration 280 Using Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) 283 Getting CDP Timers and Holdtime Information 283 Gathering Neighbor Information 284 Gathering Interface Traffic Information 289 Gathering Port and Interface Information 290 Documenting a Network Topology Using CDP 292 Using Telnet Telnetting into Multiple Devices Simultaneously 297 Checking Telnet Connections 297 Checking Telnet Users 297 Closing Telnet Sessions 298 Using SDM to Telnet into Your Router 299 Resolving Hostnames 300 Building a Host Table 300 Using DNS to Resolve Names 302 Checking Network Connectivity and Troubleshooting 305 Using the ping Command 305 Using the traceroute Command 307 Debugging 308 Using the show processes Command 310 Summary Table of Contents Exam Essentials Written Lab 5 Hands-on Labs Hands-on Lab 5.1: Backing Up Your Router IOS 314 Hands-on Lab 5.2: Upgrading or Restoring Your Router IOS 314 Hands-on Lab 5.3: Backing Up the Router Configuration 314 Hands-on Lab 5.4: Using the Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) 315 Hands-on Lab 5.5: Using Telnet 316 Hands-on Lab 5.6: Resolving Hostnames 316 Review Questions 318 Answers to Review Questions 323 Answers to Written Lab 5 325 Chapter 6 IP Routing Routing Basics The IP Routing Process Testing Your IP Routing Understanding Configuring IP Routing Configuring IP Routing in Our Network Static Routing Default Routing Dynamic Routing Routing Protocol Basics Distance-Vector Routing Protocols Routing Loops Routing Information Protocol (RIP) RIP Timers Configuring RIP Routing Verifying the RIP Routing Tables Configuring RIP Routing Example 2 Holding Down RIP Propagations RIP Version 2 (RIPv2) Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (IGRP) Verifying Your Configurations The show ip protocols Command The debug ip rip Command Enabling RIPv2 on Our Internetwork Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 6 Hands-on Labs Hands-on Lab 6.1: Creating Static Routes Hands-on Lab 6.2: Configuring RIP Routing xv xvi Table of Contents Review Questions Answers to Review Questions Answers to Written Lab 6 407 413 415 Chapter 7 Enhanced IGRP (EIGRP) and Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) EIGRP Features and Operation Protocol-Dependent Modules Neighbor Discovery Reliable Transport Protocol (RTP) Diffusing Update Algorithm (DUAL) Using EIGRP to Support Large Networks Multiple ASes VLSM Support and Summarization Route Discovery and Maintenance Configuring EIGRP Corp R1 R2 R3 Redistributing to the 871W Router from R3 Configuring Discontiguous Networks Load Balancing with EIGRP Verifying EIGRP Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) Basics OSPF Terminology SPF Tree Calculation Configuring OSPF Enabling OSPF Configuring OSPF Areas Configuring Our Network with OSPF Verifying OSPF Configuration The show ip ospf Command The show ip ospf database Command The show ip ospf interface Command The show ip ospf neighbor Command The show ip protocols Command Debugging OSPF OSPF DR and BDR Elections Neighbors Adjacencies DR and BDR Elections OSPF and Loopback Interfaces Configuring Loopback Interfaces OSPF Interface Priorities Table of Contents xvii Troubleshooting OSPF 471 Configuring EIGRP and OSPF Summary Routes 474 Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 7 Hands-on Labs Hands-on Lab 7.1: Configuring and Verifying EIGRP 479 Hands-on Lab 7.2: Enabling the OSPF Process 480 Hands-on Lab 7.3: Configuring OSPF Neighbors 481 Hands-on Lab 7.4: Verifying OSPF Operation 482 Hands-on Lab 7.5: OSPF DR and BDR Elections 482 Review Questions 484 Answers to Review Questions 489 Answers to Written Lab 7 491 Chapter 8 Layer 2 Switching and Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) Before Layer 2 Switching Switching Services Limitations of Layer 2 Switching Bridging vs. LAN Switching Three Switch Functions at Layer 2 Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) Spanning Tree Terms Spanning Tree Operations Configuring Catalyst Switches Catalyst Switch Configuration Verifying Cisco Catalyst Switches Cisco Network Assistant Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 8 Review Questions Answers to Review Questions Answers to Written Lab 8.1 Chapter 9 Virtual LANs (VLANs) VLAN Basics Broadcast Control Security Flexibility and Scalability VLAN Memberships Static VLANs Dynamic VLANs xviii Table of Contents Identifying VLANs Frame Tagging VLAN Identification Methods VLAN Trunking Protocol (VTP) VTP Modes of Operation VTP Pruning Routing between VLANs Configuring VLANs Assigning Switch Ports to VLANs Configuring Trunk Ports Configuring Inter-VLAN Routing Configuring VTP Troubleshooting VTP Telephony: Configuring Voice VLANs Configuring the Voice VLAN Configuring IP Phone Voice Traffic Using the CNA to Configure VLANs and Inter-VLAN Routing Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 9 Review Questions Answers to Review Questions Answers to Written Lab 9.1 Chapter 10 Security Perimeter, Firewall, and Internal Routers Recognizing Security Threats Mitigating Security Threats Cisco’s IOS Firewall Introduction to Access Lists Mitigating Security Issues with ACLs Standard Access Lists Wildcard Masking Standard Access List Example Controlling VTY (Telnet) Access Extended Access Lists Extended Access List Example 1 Extended Access List Example 2 Advanced Access Lists Named ACLs Switch Port ACLs Lock and Key (Dynamic ACLs) Reflexive ACLs Time-Based ACLs Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Table of Contents xix Remarks 638 Context-Based Access Control (Cisco IOS Firewall) 639 Authentication Proxy 640 Monitoring Access Lists 640 Configuring Access Lists Using SDM 643 Creating ACLs with SDM 643 Creating Firewalls with SDM 647 Summary 654 Exam Essentials 655 Written Lab 10.1 655 Hands-on Labs 656 Hands-on Lab 10.1: Standard IP Access Lists 657 Hands-on Lab 10.2: Extended IP Access Lists 657 Review Questions 661 Answers to Review Questions 666 Answers to Written Lab 10.1 668 Network Address Translation (NAT) 669 When Do We Use NAT? 670 Types of Network Address Translation 671 NAT Names 672 How NAT Works 673 Static NAT Configuration 674 Dynamic NAT Configuration 675 PAT (Overloading) Configuration 675 Simple Verification of NAT 676 Testing and Troubleshooting NAT 677 Configuring NAT on Our Internetwork 679 Configuring NAT Using SDM 684 Summary 688 Exam Essentials 688 Written Lab 11 688 Hands-on Labs 689 Lab 11.1: Preparing for NAT 691 Lab 11.2: Configuring Dynamic NAT 692 Lab 11.3: Configuring PAT 694 Review Questions 696 Answers to Review Questions 699 Answers to Written Lab 11 701 Cisco’s Wireless Technologies 703 Introduction to Wireless Technology 704 The 802.11 Standards 706 Comparing 802.11 711 10089.book Page xx Monday, July 23, 2007 3:17 PM Table of Contents Cisco’s Unified Wireless Solution Split-MAC Architecture MESH and LWAPP AWPP Wireless Security Configuring Our Wireless Internetwork Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 12 Review Questions Answers to Review Questions Answers to Written Lab 12 Chapter 13 Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) Why Do We Need IPv6? The Benefits and Uses of IPv6 IPv6 Addressing and Expressions Shortened Expression Address Types Special Addresses How IPv6 Works in an Internetwork Autoconfiguration Configuring Cisco Routers with IPv6 DHCPv6 ICMPv6 IPv6 Routing Protocols RIPng EIGRPv6 OSPFv3 Migrating to IPv6 Dual Stacking 6to4 Tunneling NAT-PT Configuring IPv6 on Our Internetwork Configuring RIPng Configuring OSPFv3 Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 13 Review Questions Answers to Review Questions Answers to Written Lab 13.1 xx Table of Contents xxi Chapter 14 Wide Area Networks 773 Introduction to Wide Area Networks 774 Defining WAN Terms 775 WAN Connection Types 775 WAN Support 777 Cable and DSL 779 Cable 780 Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) 782 Cabling the Serial Wide Area Network 785 Serial Transmission 785 Data Terminal Equipment and Data Communication Equipment 786 High-Level Data-Link Control (HDLC) Protocol 787 Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) 788 Link Control Protocol (LCP) Configuration Options 789 PPP Session Establishment 790 PPP Authentication Methods 790 Configuring PPP on Cisco Routers 791 Configuring PPP Authentication 791 Verifying PPP Encapsulation 792 PPPoE Configuration 796 Frame Relay 798 Introduction to Frame Relay Technology 798 Frame Relay Implementation and Monitoring 805 Using SDM for WAN Connections 813 Configuring PPP with Authentication Using SDM 813 Configuring PPPoE with SDM 818 Configuring Frame Relay with SDM 822 Virtual Private Networks 825 Introduction to Cisco IOS IPSec 826 IPSec Transforms 826 Configuring VPNs/IPSec Using the SDM 828 Summary Exam Essentials Written Lab 14 Hands-on Labs Hands-on Lab 14.1: Configuring PPP Encapsulation and Authentication 838 Hands-on Lab 14.2: Configuring and Monitoring HDLC 839 Hands-on Lab 14.3: Configuring Frame Relay and Subinterfaces 840 10089.book Page xxii Monday, July 23, 2007 3:17 PM xxii Table of Contents Review Questions Answers to Review Questions Answers to Written Lab 14.1 Glossary Index(more) (less) |
From : Hashim
![]() |
Nabokov's Lolita read by jeremy irons, i think there are probably no sexier combination than this one. it is such a controversial book that I wonder in today's age of catholic priest's carnal sins popping up everything, where does this fit. well perhaps the more controversial the more lasting charm it has.
well, i just enjoy having audio books and have it read to me, perhaps thi Nabokov's Lolita read by jeremy irons, i think there are probably no sexier combination than this one. it is such a controversial book that I wonder in today's age of catholic priest's carnal sins popping up everything, where does this fit. well perhaps the more controversial the more lasting charm it has. well, i just enjoy having audio books and have it read to me, perhaps this is a lazy reader talking, but I am reading all the same :) 5593(more) (less) |
From : Cirocco
![]() |
Ulysses has been labeled dirty, blasphemous, and unreadable. In a famous 1933 court decision, Judge John M. Woolsey declared it an emetic book--although he found it sufficiently unobscene to allow its importation into the United States--and Virginia Woolf was moved to decry James Joyce's "cloacal obsession." None of these adjectives, however, do the slightest justice to the novel. To this day it r
Ulysses has been labeled dirty, blasphemous, and unreadable. In a famous 1933 court decision, Judge John M. Woolsey declared it an emetic book--although he found it sufficiently unobscene to allow its importation into the United States--and Virginia Woolf was moved to decry James Joyce's "cloacal obsession." None of these adjectives, however, do the slightest justice to the novel. To this day it remains the modernist masterpiece, in which the author takes both Celtic lyricism and vulgarity to splendid extremes. It is funny, sorrowful, and even (in a close-focus sort of way) suspenseful. And despite the exegetical industry that has sprung up in the last 75 years, Ulysses is also a compulsively readable book. Even the verbal vaudeville of the final chapters can be navigated with relative ease, as long as you're willing to be buffeted, tickled, challenged, and (occasionally) vexed by Joyce's sheer command of the English language.
Among other things, a novel is simply a long story, and the first question about any story is: What happens?. In the case of Ulysses, the answer might be Everything. William Blake, one of literature's sublime myopics, saw the universe in a grain of sand. Joyce saw it in Dublin, Ireland, on June 16, 1904, a day distinguished by its utter normality. Two characters, Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom, go about their separate business, crossing paths with a gallery of indelible Dubliners. We watch them teach, eat, stroll the streets, argue, and (in Bloom's case) masturbate. And thanks to the book's stream-of-consciousness technique--which suggests no mere stream but an impossibly deep, swift-running river--we're privy to their thoughts, emotions, and memories. The result? Almost every variety of human experience is crammed into the accordian folds of a single day, which makes Ulysses not just an experimental work but the very last word in realism. Both characters add their glorious intonations to the music of Joyce's prose. Dedalus's accent--that of a freelance aesthetician, who dabbles here and there in what we might call Early Yeats Lite--will be familiar to readers of Portrait of an Artist As a Young Man. But Bloom's wistful sensualism (and naive curiosity) is something else entirely. Seen through his eyes, a rundown corner of a Dublin graveyard is a figure for hope and hopelessness, mortality and dogged survival: "Mr Bloom walked unheeded along his grove by saddened angels, crosses, broken pillars, family vaults, stone hopes praying with upcast eyes, old Ireland's hearts and hands. More sensible to spend the money on some charity for the living. Pray for the repose of the soul of. Does anybody really?" --James Marcus The New York Times Book Review, Dr. Joseph Collins Ulysses is the most important contribution that has been made to fictional literature in the 20th century. It will immortalize its author ... --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. 5570(more) (less) |
From : Reina
![]() |
CHAPTERS
1 Computer Abstractions and Technology 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Below Your Program 1.3 Under the Covers 1.4 Real Stuff:Manufacturing Pentium 4 Chips 1.5 Fallacies and Pitfalls 1.6 Concluding Remarks 1.7 Historical Perspective and Further Reading 1.8 Exercises COMPUTERS IN THE REAL WORLD 2 Instructions:Lang CHAPTERS 1 Computer Abstractions and Technology 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Below Your Program 1.3 Under the Covers 1.4 Real Stuff:Manufacturing Pentium 4 Chips 1.5 Fallacies and Pitfalls 1.6 Concluding Remarks 1.7 Historical Perspective and Further Reading 1.8 Exercises COMPUTERS IN THE REAL WORLD 2 Instructions:Language of the Computer 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Operations of the Computer Hardware 2.3 Operands of the Computer Hardware 2.4 Representing Instructions in the Computer 2.5 Logical Operations 2.6 Instructions for Making Decisions 2.7 Supporting Procedures in Computer Hardware 2.8 Communicating with people 2.9 MIPS Addressing for 32-Bit Immediates and Addresses 2.10 Translating and Starting a Program 2.11 How Compilers Optimize 2.12 How Compilers Work:An Introduction 2.13 A C Sort Example to Put It All Together 2.14 Implementing an Object-Oriented Language 2.15 Arrays versus Pointers 2.16 Resl Stuff:IA-32 Instructions 2.17 Fallacies and Pitfalls 2.18 Concluding Remarks 2.19 Historical Perspective and Further Reading 2.20 Exercises COMPUTERS IN THE REAL WORLD 3 Arithmetic for Computers 4 Assessing and Understanding Performance 5 The Processor:Datapath and Control 6 Enhancing Performance with Pipelining 7 Large and Fast:Exploiting Memory Hierarchy 8 Storage,Networks,and Other Peripherals 9 Multiprocessors and Clusters APPENDICES A Assemblers,Linkers,and SPIM Simulator A-2 B The Basics of Logic Design B-2 5506(more) (less) |
From : Everett
![]() |
Book Description
ASP.NET 2.0 Unleashed is a revision of the best-selling ASP.NET Unleashed, by Microsoft Software Legend Stephen Walther. Itcovers virtually all features of ASP.NET 2.0 including more than 50 new controls, personalization, master pages, and web parts. All code samples are presented in VB and C#. Throughout the more than 2,000 pages, you will be shown how to develop s Book Description ASP.NET 2.0 Unleashed is a revision of the best-selling ASP.NET Unleashed, by Microsoft Software Legend Stephen Walther. Itcovers virtually all features of ASP.NET 2.0 including more than 50 new controls, personalization, master pages, and web parts. All code samples are presented in VB and C#. Throughout the more than 2,000 pages, you will be shown how to develop state-of-the-art Web applications using Microsoft's latest development tools. This resource is guaranteed to be used as a reference guide over and over! From the Back Cover ASP.NET 2.0 Unleashed is a revision of the best-selling ASP.NET Unleashed, by Microsoft Software Legend Stephen Walther. Itcovers virtually all features of ASP.NET 2.0 including more than 50 new controls, personalization, master pages, and web parts. All code samples are presented in VB and C#. Throughout the more than 2,000 pages, you will be shown how to develop state-of-the-art Web applications using Microsoft's latest development tools. This resource is guaranteed to be used as a reference guide over and over! Table of Contents | Index Copyright About the Author Acknowledgments We Want to Hear from You! Introduction Who Should Read This Book? What Do You Need to Know Before You Read This Book? Changes to This Book How This Book Is Organized Viewing the Code Samples Part I: Building ASP.NET Pages Chapter 1. Overview of the ASP.NET Framework ASP.NET and the .NET Framework Understanding ASP.NET Controls Understanding ASP.NET Pages Installing the ASP.NET Framework Summary Chapter 2. Using the Standard Controls Displaying Information Accepting User Input Submitting Form Data Displaying Images Using the Panel Control Using the HyperLink Control Summary Chapter 3. Using the Validation Controls Overview of the Validation Controls Using the RequiredFieldValidator Control Using the RangeValidator Control Using the CompareValidator Control Using the RegularExpressionValidator Control Using the CustomValidator Control Using the ValidationSummary Control Creating Custom Validation Controls Summary Chapter 4. Using the Rich Controls Accepting File Uploads Displaying a Calendar Displaying Advertisements Displaying Different Page Views Displaying a Wizard Summary Part II: Designing ASP.NET Websites Chapter 5. Designing Websites with Master Pages Creating Master Pages Modifying Master Page Content Loading Master Pages Dynamically Summary Chapter 6. Designing Websites with Themes Creating Themes Adding Skins to Themes Adding Cascading Style Sheets to Themes Creating Global Themes Applying Themes Dynamically Summary Chapter 7. Creating Custom Controls with User Controls Creating User Controls AJAX and User Controls Dynamically Loading User Controls Summary Part III: Performing Data Access Chapter 8. Overview of Data Access Using DataBound Controls Using DataSource Controls Using Programmatic DataBinding Understanding Templates and DataBinding Expressions Overview of SQL Server 2005 Express Sample Database-Driven Web Application Summary Chapter 9. Using the SqlDataSource Control Creating Database Connections Executing Database Commands Using ASP.NET Parameters with the SqlDataSource Control Programmatically Executing SqlDataSource Commands Caching Database Data with the SqlDataSource Control Summary Chapter 10. Using List Controls Overview of the List Controls Working with the DropDownList Control Working with the RadioButtonList Control Working with the ListBox Control Working with the CheckBoxList Control Working with the BulletedList Control Creating a Custom List Control Summary Chapter 11. Using the GridView Control GridView Control Fundamentals Using Fields with the GridView Control Working with GridView Control Events Extending the GridView Control Summary Chapter 12. Using the DetailsView and FormView Controls Using the DetailsView Control Using the FormView Control Summary Chapter 13. Using the Repeater and DataList Controls Using the Repeater Control Using the DataList Control Summary Part IV: Building Components Chapter 14. Building Components Building Basic Components Building Component Libraries Architectural Considerations Summary Chapter 15. Using the ObjectDataSource Control Representing Objects with the ObjectDataSource Control Using Parameters with the ObjectDataSource Control Paging, Sorting, and Filtering Data with the ObjectDataSource Control Handling ObjectDataSource Control Events Concurrency and the ObjectDataSource Control Extending the ObjectDataSource Control Summary Chapter 16. Building Data Access Components Connected Data Access Disconnected Data Access Executing Asynchronous Database Commands Building Database Objects with the .NET Framework Summary Part V: Site Navigation Chapter 17. Using the Navigation Controls Understanding Site Maps Using the SiteMapPath Control Using the Menu Control Using the TreeView Control Building a SQL Hierarchical Data Source Control Summary Chapter 18. Using Site Maps Using the SiteMapDataSource Control Using the SiteMap Class Advanced Site Map Configuration Creating Custom Site Map Providers Generating a Google SiteMap File Summary Chapter 19. Advanced Navigation Remapping URLs Using the VirtualPathProvider Class Summary Part VI: Security Chapter 20. Using the Login Controls Overview of the Login Controls Using the Login Control Using the CreateUserWizard Control Using the LoginStatus Control Using the LoginName Control Using the ChangePassword Control Using the PasswordRecovery Control Using the LoginView Control Summary Chapter 21. Using ASP.NET Membership Configuring Authentication Configuring Authorization Using ASP.NET Membership Using the Role Manager Summary Part VII: Building ASP.NET Applications Chapter 22. Maintaining Application State Using Browser Cookies Using Session State Using Profiles Summary Chapter 23. Caching Application Pages and Data Overview of Caching Using Page Output Caching Using Partial Page Caching Using DataSource Caching Using Data Caching Using SQL Cache Dependencies Summary Chapter 24. Localizing Applications for Multiple Languages Setting the Current Culture Using the CultureInfo Class Creating Local Resources Creating Global Resources Using the Localize Control Summary Chapter 25. Working with the HTTP Runtime Creating a Custom BuildProvider Creating a Custom ExpressionBuilder Creating HTTP Handlers Working with HTTP Applications and HTTP Modules Summary Chapter 26. Configuring Applications Overview of Website Configuration Using the Configuration API Creating Custom Configuration Sections Creating Encrypted Configuration Sections Summary Part VIII: Building Applications with Web Parts Chapter 27. Introduction to Web Parts Overview of the Web Part Framework Creating a Simple Web Part Application Using Catalog Zones Using Editor Zones Using Connections Zones Summary Chapter 28. Building Web Parts Creating Simple Web Parts Filtering Web Parts Creating Custom Web Part Verbs Displaying Web Part Help Managing Web Parts with the WebPartManager Control Summary Chapter 29. Personalizing Web Parts Overview of Personalization Configuring Personalization Creating Personalizable Web Parts Administrating Personalization Creating Custom Personalization Providers Summary Chapter 30. Extending the Web Part Framework Creating Custom Web Part Zones Creating Custom Catalog Zones Creating Custom Editor Zones Creating Custom Web Part Display Modes Summary Part IX: Custom Control Building Chapter 31. Building Custom Controls Overview of Custom Control Building View State and Control State Processing Postback Data and Events Working with Control Property Collections Creating a Better Designer Experience Summary Chapter 32. Integrating JavaScript in Custom Controls Using the ClientScriptManager Class Building JavaScript Controls Building AJAX Controls Summary Chapter 33. Building Templated Databound Controls Creating Templated Controls Creating Templated Databound Controls Summary Part X: Sample Application Chapter 34. Building an E-Commerce Application Overview of the E-Commerce Application Using Master Pages, Themes, and User Controls Building a Component Library Creating a Custom Site Map Provider Creating a Shopping Cart Protecting Credit Card Numbers Handling Images Retrieving Data with AJAX Improving Performance Through Caching Conforming to Standards Summary Index 5485(more) (less) |
From : Keessing
![]() |
http://www.amazon.com/Beginning-XML-Databa...s/dp/0471791202
Book Description Supported by all major database systems, XML provides an easy, standardized method of transferring data between databases and to and from the Web, independent of the software in use Offers database programmers and data-driven Web developers detailed guidance on how to http://www.amazon.com/Beginning-XML-Databa...s/dp/0471791202 Book Description Supported by all major database systems, XML provides an easy, standardized method of transferring data between databases and to and from the Web, independent of the software in use Offers database programmers and data-driven Web developers detailed guidance on how to understand and work with XML as data Numerous hands-on, step-by-step examples help readers learn to simplify database work using XML Shows how to use XML to exchange data between multiple databases either internally or with external customers and partners Covers XML in popular databases including Oracle Database, SQL Server, and brief coverage of DB2 Database Covers basic syntax for XML, the XML DOM, and XSL – with an emphasis on database use, and native XML databases Additional topics covered include Native XML databases, XPath, XQuery, XLink, XPointer, DTDs, XML Schemas, among others From the Back Cover The union of XML and relational databases creates a powerful tool with the ability to transfer information between two completely unrelated databases. With this book, veteran author Gavin Powell shows you how this confluence of two technologies can simplify your database work and provide a more standardized way to exchange data between multiple databases and web sites. You'll get an in-depth look at specific XML datatypes that are considered the most critical alliances between XML and a relational database. Plus, an introduction to the basics of SQL and numerous XML standards prove to be essential so that you can grasp database structure and comprehend how XML is used with the Oracle® and SQL Server relational databases. Throughout the book, valuable exercises and a surfeit of step-by-step examples will help you get an overall understanding of the topics at hand. What you will learn from this book The platform independence capability that comes from using XML— including independence from database vendors The basics of XML, XSL, the XML DOM, and SQL XML datatypes and features in Oracle Database and SQL Server How to move data anywhere using XML (B2B) Ways to read XML documents using XQuery and navigate documents using XPath® XML, the object data model, native XML databases, and industry applications of XML Who this book is for This book is for anyone—from novice to expert—who is interested in learning the details of XML and database technology as applied to both XML and relational database technology, working together. Wrox Beginning guides are crafted to make learning programming languages and technologies easier than you think, providing a structured, tutorial format that will guide you through all the techniques involved. Introduction. Chapter 1: What Is XML? Comparing HTML and XML. What Is XML Capable Of? What Is XSL? Creating and Displaying a Simple XML Document. Embedding XML in HTML Pages (Data Islands). Introducing the XML Document Object Model. XML Browsers and Different Internet Browsers. The Document Type Definition. XML Syntax. Elements. Attributes. Reserved Characters in XML. Ignoring the XML Parser with CDATA. What Are XML Namespaces? XML in Many Languages. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 2: The XML Document Object Model. Basic XML DOM Structure. The Primary XML DOM Classes. The Node Class. The Document Class. The Element Class. The Attr Class. The Text Class. More Obscure XML DOM Classes. The parseError Class. HTTPRequest Class. Other Classes. Generating XML Using ASP. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 3: Extending the Power of XML with XSL. What Is XSL? The Roots of XSL. Basic XSL Elements Syntax. Processing Instruction Elements. Transformation Elements. Node Creation Elements. Data Retrieval Elements. Control Structure Elements. Advanced XSL Syntax. Function Versus Method. XSL Function Syntax. XSL Method Syntax. XSL Pattern Matching Syntax. Combining the XML DOM and XSL. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 4: Relational Database Tables and XML. Using SQL for Database Access. Queries. Changing Data in a Database. Generating XML Pages Using Basic SQL. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 5: Oracle Database and XML. The Oracle XMLType Data Type. Oracle XMLType Data Type Methods. Implementing XML in an Oracle Database. Creating XML Documents from an Oracle Database. XML and the Database. New XML Documents. Retrieving from XML Documents. Using XMLType Methods to Read XML Documents. Changing and Removing XML Document Content. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 6: SQL Server and XML. The SQL Server XML Data Type. SQL Server XML Data Type Methods. Generating XML: The FOR XML Clause. FOR XML RAW Mode. FOR XML AUTO Mode. FOR XML EXPLICIT Mode. FOR XML PATH Mode. Generating Tuples from XML: OPENXML. Working with XML Data Types. Adding XML Documents to SQL Server. Retrieving and Modifying XML Data Types. Defining XML Content with XSD Schemas. Strongly Typing XML Documents with XSD. Mapping an XSD Schema to a Table. Annotating the XSD Script to Enforce Relationships. Storing XSD as a Schema Collection. Creating Indexes on XML Data Types. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 7: XML in Heterogeneous Environments. Basic XML Document Transfer. Sharing XML with Web Services. The HTTP Protocol. Transformation Processing. Web Services Protocol. Applying Semantics to XML Transfers. Simple Object Access Protocol. External Data and XML. B2B Data Transfer. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 8: Understanding XML Documents as Objects. Why Explain the Object Model Here? XML Data as a Relational Structure. The Basics of the Object Data Model. Creating an Object Model from a Relational Model. XML Data as an Object Structure. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 9: What Is a Native XML Database? An XML Document Is a Database. Defining a Native XML Database. Creating a Native XML Database. Schema-Less Native XML Database Collections. What Is Indexing? What About Using XSL and the XML DOM? Classify Native XML Databases by Content. Document-Centric XML. Data-Centric XML. Using a Native XML Database. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 10: Navigating XML Documents Using XPath. What Is XPath? Absolute and Relative Paths. XPath Nodes. XPath Node Relationships. XPath Expression Syntax. Simple Expressions to Find Nodes. Find Specific Values Using Predicates. Use Wildcards to Find Unknown Nodes. Expressions on Multiple Paths. XPath Axes. XPath Functions. Accessor Functions. Errors and Tracing. Constructor Functions. Numeric Functions. String Functions. URI Functions. Boolean Functions. Functions on Durations, Dates, and Times. QName Functions. Node Functions. Sequence Functions. Context Functions. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 11: Reading XML Documents Using XQuery. What Is XQuery? Shared Components. The Basics of XQuery. Executing XQuery Queries. Embedding XQuery Code into HTML. XQuery Terminology. XQuery Syntax. Functions in XQuery. XQuery FLWOR. FLWOR: The Basic for Loop and Return Clause. FLWOR: Adding a where Clause. FLWOR: Adding an Order By Clause. FLWOR: Declaring Variables with the Let Clause. FLWOR: Embedded for Loops and Communication. XQuery in Oracle XML DB. What Is XQueryX? Summary. Exercises. Chapter 12: Some Advanced XML Standards. XLink and XPointer. What Is XLink? Simple XLinks. Extended XLinks. What Is XPointer? XForms and HTML Form Generation. The XForms Model. XForms Namespaces. Other XForms Input Types. Data Types in XForms. Restricting Values with XForms Properties. XForms Object Actions. Built-in and User-Defined Functions. Binding Data Using XPath. Embedding XML Documents with XInclude. Formatting XML Output Using XML-FO. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 13: Data Modeling and XML. The Document Type Definition. DTD Elements. DTD Attributes. DTD Entities. The XML Schema Definition. Global and Local Types. Basic XSD Structures. Substitution. Summary. Exercises. Chapter 14: Applying XML Databases in Industry. What Can XML Do? Managing Complex Data with XML. Does Database Size Matter? Are Schema Changes Easier with XML? Native XML Databases. Specific XML Vocabularies. XML Vocabularies. Commercial Implementation of XML. When to Use a Native XML Database. Summary. Glossary. Appendix A: Exercise Answers. Appendix B: The Sample Database. Appendix C: Syntax Conventions. Appendix D: XML Technology. Appendix E: XML Relational Database Technology. Index. 5395 5396(more) (less) |
From : Othello
![]() |
Book Description
This book is a single reference that’s indispensable for Excel beginners, intermediate users, power users, and would-be power users everywhere Fully updated for the new release, this latest edition provides comprehensive, soup-to-nuts coverage, delivering over 900 pages of Excel tips, tricks, and techniques readers won’t find anywhere else Book Description This book is a single reference that’s indispensable for Excel beginners, intermediate users, power users, and would-be power users everywhere Fully updated for the new release, this latest edition provides comprehensive, soup-to-nuts coverage, delivering over 900 pages of Excel tips, tricks, and techniques readers won’t find anywhere else John Walkenbach, aka "Mr. Spreadsheet," is one of the world’s leading authorities on Excel Thoroughly updated to cover the revamped Excel interface, new file formats, enhanced interactivity with other Office applications, and upgraded collaboration features Includes a valuable CD-ROM with templates and worksheets from the book 5392 From the Back Cover Create killer formulas—Mr. Spreadsheet shows you how Excel master John Walkenbach has shared his expertise in two previous editions of this bestseller. Now he shows you how to create financial formulas, release the power of array formulas, develop custom worksheet functions with VBA, debug formulas, and more with Excel 2007. If you already know your way around the newest Excel and want to concentrate on using formulas to extend its capabilities even further, you've come to the right place. It's estimated that only about ten percent of Excel users really understand how to get the most out of worksheet formulas. If you're ready to join that elite group, here's your membership kit. CD-ROM INCLUDES: Sample files for tutorials See the CD appendix for details and complete system requirements. Mr. Spreadsheet's Success Techniques Technique # 1 Master operators, error values, and absolute vs. relative references Technique # 2 Find errors and debug formulas Technique # 3 Use pivot tables to eliminate formulas Technique # 4 Create single- and multi-cell array formulas Technique # 5 Build custom functions with VBA 5391 http://www.amazon.com/Excel-2007-Formulas-...f/dp/0470044020 Table of Contents Part I: Basic Information. Chapter 1: Excel in a Nutshell. Chapter 2: Basic Facts about Formulas. Chapter 3: Working with Names. Part II: Using Functions in Your Formulas. Chapter 4: Introducing Worksheet Functions. Chapter 5: Manipulating Text. Chapter 6: Working with Dates and Times. Chapter 7: Counting and Summing Techniques. Chapter 8: Using Lookup Functions. Chapter 9: Tables and Worksheet Databases. Chapter 10: Miscellaneous Calculations. Part III: Financial Formulas. Chapter 11: Borrowing and Investing Formulas. Chapter 12: Discounting and Depreciation Formulas. Chapter 13: Financial Schedules. Part IV: Array Formulas. Chapter 14: Introducing Arrays. Chapter 15: Performing Magic with Array Formulas. Part V: Miscellaneous Formula Techniques. Chapter 16: Intentional Circular References. Chapter 17: Charting Techniques. Chapter 18: Pivot Tables. Chapter 19: Conditional Formatting and Data Validation. Chapter 20: Creating Megaformulas. Chapter 21: Tools and Methods for Debugging Formulas. Part VI: Developing Custom Worksheet Functions. Chapter 22: Introducing VBA. Chapter 23: Function Procedure Basics. Chapter 24: VBA Programming Concepts. Chapter 25: VBA Custom Function Examples. Part VII: Appendixes. Appendix A: Excel Function Reference. Appendix B: Using Custom Number Formats. Appendix C: Additional Excel Resources. Appendix D: What’s on the CD-ROM. Index. The post was last edited by Othello on 2007-9-19 11:59 ](more) (less) |
From : Legrand
![]() |
Features & Benefits | Description | Contents
John Hennessy Stanford University David Patterson University of California, Berkeley Features & Benefits -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Presents state-of-the-art design examples including: IA-64 architectu Features & Benefits | Description | Contents John Hennessy Stanford University David Patterson University of California, Berkeley Features & Benefits -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Presents state-of-the-art design examples including: IA-64 architecture and its first implementation, the Itanium Pipeline designs for Pentium III and Pentium IV The cluster that runs the Google search engine EMC storage systems and their performance Sony Playstation 2 Infiniband, a new storage area and system area network SunFire 6800 multiprocessor server and its processor the UltraSPARC III Trimedia TM32 media processor and the Transmeta Crusoe processor Examines quantitative performance analysis in the commercial server market and the embedded market, as well as the traditional desktop market. Updates all the examples and figures with the most recent benchmarks, such as SPEC 2000. Expands coverage of instruction sets to include descriptions of digital signal processors, media processors, and multimedia extensions to desktop processors. Analyzes capacity, cost, and performance of disks over two decades. Surveys the role of clusters in scientific computing and commercial computing. Presents a survey, taxonomy, and the benchmarks of errors and failures in computer systems. Presents detailed descriptions of the design of storage systems and of clusters. Surveys memory hierarchies in modern microprocessors and the key parameters of modern disks. Presents a glossary of networking terms. Description back to top -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This best-selling title, considered for over a decade to be essential reading for every serious student and practitioner of computer design, has been updated throughout to address the most important trends facing computer designers today. In this edition, the authors bring their trademark method of quantitative analysis not only to high performance desktop machine design, but also to the design of embedded and server systems. They have illustrated their principles with designs from all three of these domains, including examples from consumer electronics, multimedia and web technologies, and high performance computing. The book retains its highly rated features: Fallacies and Pitfalls, which share the hard-won lessons of real designers; Historical Perspectives, which provide a deeper look at computer design history; Putting it all Together, which present a design example that illustrates the principles of the chapter; Worked Examples, which challenge the reader to apply the concepts, theories and methods in smaller scale problems; and Cross-Cutting Issues, which show how the ideas covered in one chapter interact with those presented in others. In addition, a new feature, Another View, presents brief design examples in one of the three domains other than the one chosen for Putting It All Together. The authors present a new organization of the material as well, reducing the overlap with their other text, Computer Organization and Design: A Hardware/Software Approach 2/e, and offering more in-depth treatment of advanced topics in multithreading, instruction level parallelism, VLIW architectures, memory hierarchies, storage devices and network technologies. Also new to this edition, is the adoption of the MIPS 64 as the instruction set architecture. In addition to several online appendixes, two new appendixes will be printed in the book: one contains a complete review of the basic concepts of pipelining, the other provides solutions a selection of the exercises. Both will be invaluable to the student or professional learning on her own or in the classroom. Hennessy and Patterson continue to focus on fundamental techniques for designing real machines and for maximizing their cost/performance. Contents back to top -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Foreword Preface Acknowledgments Chapter 1 - Fundamentals of Computer Design Chapter 2 - Instruction Set Principles and Examples Chapter 3 - Instruction-Level Parallelism and Its Dynamic Exploitation Chapter 4 - Exploiting Instruction-Level Parallelism with Software Approaches Chapter 5 - Memory Hierarchy Design Chapter 6 - Multiprocessors and Thread-Level Parallelism Chapter 7 - Storage Systems Chapter 8 - Interconnection Networks and Clusters Appendix A - Pipelining: Basic and Intermediate Concepts Appendix B - Solutions to Selected Exercises Online Appendices Appendix C - A Survey of RISC Architectures for Desktop, Server, and Embedded Computers Appendix D - An Alternative to RISC: The Intel 80x86 Appendix E - Another Alternative to RISC: The VAX Architecture Appendix F - The IBM 360/370 Architecture for Mainframe Computers Appendix G - Vector Processors Revised by Krste Asanovic Appendix H - Computer Arithmetic by David Goldberg Appendix I - Implementing Coherence Protocols References Index Computer Architecture A Quantitative Approach Fourth Edition Features & Benefits | Reviews | Description | Contents John Hennessy Stanford University David Patterson University of California, Berkeley Features & Benefits -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Increased coverage on achieving parallelism with multiprocessors. Case studies of latest technology from industry including the Sun Niagara Multiprocessor, AMD Opteron, and Pentium 4. Three review appendices, included in the printed volume, review the basic and intermediate principles the main text relies upon. Eight reference appendices, collected on the CD, cover a range of topics including specific architectures, embedded systems, application specific processors--some guest authored by subject experts. Reviews -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- “If Neil Armstrong offers to give you a tour of the lunar module, or Tiger Woods asks you to go play golf with him, you should do it. When Hennessy and Patterson offer to lead you on a tour of where computer architecture is going, they call it Computer Architecture: A Quantitative Approach, 4th Edition. You need one. Tours leave on the hour.†— Robert Colwell, Intel lead designer “The book has been updated so it covers the latest computer architectures like the 64-bit AMD Opteron as well as those from Sun, Intel and other major vendors ... I highly recommend this book for those learning about computer architecture or those wanting to understand architectures that differ from those they are currently using. It does an excellent job of covering most of the major architectural approaches employed today.†— William Wong, Electronic Design, November 2006 “Computer hardware is entering into a new era, what with multicore processing, virtualization and other enhancements … Computer Architecture covers these topics and updates the insightful work in the earlier editions that laid out the full range of metrics needed for evaluating processor performance.†— Joab Jackson, GCN, November 20, 2006 Description back to top -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The era of seemingly unlimited growth in processor performance is over: single chip architectures can no longer overcome the performance limitations imposed by the power they consume and the heat they generate. Today, Intel and other semiconductor firms are abandoning the single fast processor model in favor of multi-core microprocessors--chips that combine two or more processors in a single package. In the fourth edition of Computer Architecture, the authors focus on this historic shift, increasing their coverage of multiprocessors and exploring the most effective ways of achieving parallelism as the key to unlocking the power of multiple processor architectures. Additionally, the new edition has expanded and updated coverage of design topics beyond processor performance, including power, reliability, availability, and dependability. CD System Requirements PDF Viewer The CD material includes PDF documents that you can read with a PDF viewer such as Adobe, Acrobat or Adobe Reader. Recent versions of Adobe Reader for some platforms are included on the CD. HTML Browser The navigation framework on this CD is delivered in HTML and JavaScript. It is recommended that you install the latest version of your favorite HTML browser to view this CD. The content has been verified under Windows XP with the following browsers: Internet Explorer 6.0, Firefox 1.5; under Mac OS X (Panther) with the following browsers: Internet Explorer 5.2, Firefox 1.0.6, Safari 1.3; and under Mandriva Linux 2006 with the following browsers: Firefox 1.0.6, Konqueror 3.4.2, Mozilla 1.7.11. The content is designed to be viewed in a browser window that is at least 720 pixels wide. You may find the content does not display well if your display is not set to at least 1024x768 pixel resolution. Operating System This CD can be used under any operating system that includes an HTML browser and a PDF viewer. This includes Windows, Mac OS, and most Linux and Unix systems. Contents back to top -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Fundamentals of Computer Design 1.1 Introduction 1.2 The Changing Face of Computing and the Task of the Computer Designer 1.3 Technology Trends 1.4 Power in Integrated Circuits 1.5 Trends in Cost 1.6 Reliability, Availability and Dependability 1.7 Measuring and Reporting Performance 1.8 Quantitative Principles of Computer Design 1.9 Putting It All Together: Performance and Price-Performance 1.10 Fallacies and Pitfalls 1.11 Concluding Remarks 2 Instruction Level Parallelism and Its Exploitation 2.1 Instruction-Level Parallelism: Concepts and Challenges 2.2 Basic Compiler Techniques for Exposing ILP 2.3 Reducing Branch Costs with Prediction 2.4 Overcoming Data Hazards with Dynamic Scheduling 2.5 Dynamic Scheduling: Examples and the Algorithm 2.6 Hardware-Based Speculation 2.7 Exploiting ILP using Multiple Issue and Static Scheduling 2.8 Exploiting ILP using Dynamic Scheduling, Multiple Issue, and Speculation 2.9 Advanced Techniques for Instruction Delivery and Speculation 2.10 Putting It All Together: The Intel Pentium 4 2.11 Fallacies and Pitfalls 2.12 Concluding Remarks 3 Advanced Techniques for Exploiting Instruction-Level Parallelism and Their Limits 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Studies of the Limitations of ILP 3.3 Limitations on ILP for Realizable Processors 3.4 Crosscutting Issues: Hardware versus Software Speculation 3.5 Multithreading: Using ILP Support to Exploit Thread-level Parallelism 3.6 Putting It All Together: Performance and Efficiency in Advanced Multiple Issue Processors 3.7 Fallacies and Pitfalls 3.8 Concluding Remarks 4 Multiprocessors and Thread-Level Parallelism 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Symmetric Shared-Memory Architectures 4.3 Performance of Symmetric Shared-Memory Multiprocessors 4.4 Distributed Shared Memory and Directory-Based Coherence 4.5 Synchronization: The Basics 4.6 Models of Memory Consistency: An Introduction 4.7 Crosscutting Issues 4.8 Putting It All Together: The Sun T1 Multiprocessor 4.9 Fallacies and Pitfalls 4.10 Concluding Remarks 5 Memory Hierarchy Design 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Eleven Advanced Optimizations of Cache Performance 5.3 Memory Technology and Optimizations 5.4 Protection: Virtual Memory and Virtual Machines 5.5 Crosscutting Issues: The Design of Memory Hierarchies 5.6 Putting It All Together: AMD Opteron Memory Hierarchy 5.7 Fallacies and Pitfalls 5.8 Concluding Remarks 6 Storage Systems 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Advanced Topics in Disk Storage 6.3 Definition and Examples of Real Faults and Failures 6.4 I/O Performance, Reliability Measures, and Benchmarks 6.5 A Little Queuing Theory 6.6 Crosscutting Issues 6.7 Designing and Evaluating an I/O System - The Internet Archive Cluster 6.8 Putting It All Together: NetApp FAS6000 Filer 6.9 Fallacies and Pitfalls 6.10 Concluding Remarks Appendix A: Pipelining: Basic and Intermediate Concepts A.1 Introduction A.2 The Major Hurdle of Pipelining—Pipeline Hazards A.3 How Is Pipelining Implemented? A.4 What Makes Pipelining Hard to Implement? A.5 Extending the MIPS Pipeline to Handle Multicycle Operations A.6 Putting It All Together: The MIPS R4000 Pipeline A.7 Crosscutting Issues A.8 Fallacies and Pitfalls A.9 Concluding Remarks Appendix B: Instruction Set Principles and Examples B.1 Introduction B.2 Classifying Instruction Set Architectures B.3 Memory Addressing B.4 Addressing Modes for Signal Processing 1 B.5 Type and Size of Operands B.6 Operations in the Instruction Set B.7 Instructions for Control Flow B.8 Encoding an Instruction Set B.9 Crosscutting Issues: The Role of Compilers B.10 Putting It All Together: The MIPS Architecture B.11 Fallacies and Pitfalls B.12 Concluding Remarks Appendix C: Introduction to Memory Hierarchy C.1 Introduction C.2 Cache Performance C.3 Seven Basic Cache Optimizations C.4 Virtual Memory C.5 Protection and Examples of Virtual Memory C.6 Fallacies and Pitfalls C.7 Concluding Remarks(more) (less) |
From : Cathbabe
![]() |
5272
|
From : Rowdy
![]() |
Book Description
Get hands-on, practical guidance for using Microsoft SQL Server Integration Services, the next generation data integration platform from Microsoft. Integration Services is a powerful tool for business intelligence, so understanding the essentials--how to develop and deploy SSIS packages, as well as how to apply these skills to data warehousing solutions--is critical to harn Book Description Get hands-on, practical guidance for using Microsoft SQL Server Integration Services, the next generation data integration platform from Microsoft. Integration Services is a powerful tool for business intelligence, so understanding the essentials--how to develop and deploy SSIS packages, as well as how to apply these skills to data warehousing solutions--is critical to harnessing the full benefits of SQL Server. This step-by-step tutorial teaches you all the essentials for getting started, including data transformation, scripting, security, and best practices for developing enterprise-class data integration applications. With STEP BY STEP, you work at your own pace through hands-on, learn-by-doing exercises. Whether you're a beginning programmer or new to this version of the technology, you'll understand the fundamental techniques for using SQL Server 2005 Integration Services. A companion CD includes data sets and sample code. From the Publisher Key Book Benefits: -Provides hands-on exercises that help develop proficiency quickly -Features expertise from Hitachi Consulting, which creates specialized SQL Server-based data solutions for corporate customers -Includes a companion CD with sample data sets and code Table of Contents Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Integration Services Step by Step Introduction Part I - Getting Started with Integration Services Chapter 1 - Introduction to SQL Server Integration Services Chapter 2 - Building Your First Package Part II - Designing Packages Chapter 3 - Extracting and Loading Data Chapter 4 - Using Data Flow Transformations Chapter 5 - Managing Control Flow Chapter 6 - Scripting Tasks Chapter 7 - Debugging Packages Chapter 8 - Managing Package Execution Part III - Managing Packages Chapter 9 - Detecting and Handling Processing Errors Chapter 10 - Securing and Deploying SSIS Packages Chapter 11 - Optimizing SSIS Packages Part IV - Applying SSIS to Data Warehousing Chapter 12 - Data Warehouse Concepts Chapter 13 - Populating Data Warehouse Structures Chapter 14 - SSIS General Principles Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars CD Content 5242 5242(more) (less) |
From : Virgil


All
Hottest





























