MacBook All In one For Dummies


MacBook All In one For Dummies | 11 MB


MacBook All-in-one for Dummies Makes Everything Easier!
With a MacBook, you can work and play anywhere. With 9 books in 1, MacBook All-in-one for Dummies shows you how! You'll find coverage of:


Getting started -- choose the MacBook that suits your needs, set it up, customize your preferences, and organize files and folders.
Using Mac OS X -- learn your way around Snow Leopard, get to know the Dock, find things with Spotlight, and back up your system with Time Machine.
Customizing and Sharing.
Going Mobile With iLife -- explore iLife, where photos, movies, music, and your very own Web site all hang out.
iWork For the Road Warrior -- do it the Mac way with Pages, Numbers, and Keynote, the iWork productivity applications.
Typical Internet Stuff -- browse with Safari, store your stuff on iDisk, use Apple Mail, and iChat with friends.
Networking in Mac OS X -- set up a network, go wireless, and use AirPort Extreme.
Expanding Your System -- see how to add memory and connect hard drives and printers using USB and FireWire.
Advanced Mac OS X.
Learn the basics about using and maintaining your MacBook, how to work with Mac OS X, use the iWork productivity suite, enjoy the iLife, and cruise the Web from anywhere. Plus, you'll go under the hood and explore custom scripts and tweaks to help you get more from your MacBook and troubleshoot solutions.

792 pages
Publisher: For Dummies (November 16, 2009)
Language: English

Download : HotFile


Understanding Pure Mathematics



Understanding Pure Mathematics
By A.J. Sadler, D.W.S. Thorning


Publisher: Oxford University Press
Number Of Pages: 608
Publication Date: 1987-05-28
ISBN-10 / ASIN: 0199142432
ISBN-13 / EAN: 9780199142439



Product Description:

A classic single-volume textbook, popular for its direct and straightforward approach. Understanding Pure Mathematics starts by filling the gap between GCSE and A Level and builds on this base for candidates taking either single-subject of double-subject A Level.


The Code Book: How to Make It, Break It, Hack It, Crack It


  The Code Book: How to Make It, Break It, Hack It, Crack It | PDF | 2 MB

Safari and WebKit Development for iPhone OS 3.0


Safari and WebKit Development for iPhone OS 3.0 | 10 MB


The must-have reference for building and optimizing Web applications for Safari on iPhone 3.0

The iPhone offers a compelling Web-based application development platform revolving around its built-in browser, Safari, which is built upon the open source WebKit framework. This must-have book serves as a hands-on guide to developing iPhone and iPod touch Web applications.

Beginning with an introduction to Web application development for iPhone, this unique book then covers invaluable information on working with mobile and touch technologies, utilizing iPhone UI frameworks, and designing, styling, and programming the interface. You'll discover how to move Web apps to native apps and much, much more.
-Walks you through the process of developing Web applications for iPhone and iPod touch
-Covers how to design and develop applications that emulate the look and feel of native iPhone apps.
-Instructs on how your Web app can respond to finger touch events that are a core part of the iPhone event model.
-Shows you how to create Web-based offline applications using the latest HTML 5 cache technologies
-Explains the unique process of moving Web apps to native apps
-Features a bonus chapter on optimizing and developing for third-party browsers

Completely compliant with the new iPhone OS 3.0, as well as latest enhancements to Safari on iPhone, this indispensable book is a must-have resource.

U.S. News Ultimate Guide to Law Schools, Third Edition


Childhood and Nature


Mathematics made difficult


Mathematics made difficult
By Carl E Linderholm


Publisher: World Pub
Number Of Pages: 207
Publication Date: 1972
ISBN-10 / ASIN: 0529045524
ISBN-13 / EAN: 9780529045522



Summary: A hilarious book that just might teach you something
Rating: 5


I found this book while browsing my university library 25 years ago. In a sea of titles like "Mathematics Made Easy/Simple/etc." this book stood out from the crowd. Now, my mathematical background would probably be categorized as "moderate" - the ordinary math taken by an engineering student, 3 years of calculus and differential equations. Advanced algebra, group and set theory, and topology are all beyond my understanding.

Since really understanding this book more or less depends on a knowledge of all of these, one might expect it to go above me. What I found instead was, in addition to enjoying the delightfully witty writing, I actually learned something about all these topics. Not that I remember much now, of course - but probably no less than I remember from most subjects I was actually enrolled in.

Example: Early in the book, he reproduces an imaginary Q&A in which the questioner relates that when he meets a mathematician at a party and he says "Well, I guess we've come a long way since 1+1=2", the mathematician makes a wry face. The author then, in answering the imaginary questioner, takes an entire chapter explaining exactly how complicated 1+1=2 really is. You have to start with what does "1" mean, for example. This leads to mathematical constructs I had never dreamed of simply to understand what numbers and counting are.

In summary, this is a wonderful book for anybody with at least an ordinary college-level understanding of math, and I hope somebody reprints it.



Summary: Categories for the Non-Working Mathematician
Rating: 4


This book is a wonderfully humorous satire of the project (possibly pushed by Mac Lane, Lawvere, Grothendieck, and others, though never as far as one might think) to reformulate all of mathematics on category-theoretic foundations. As such, many of the jokes will be lost on a reader with no familiarity with the language of category theory. But there are plenty of other jokes that even a high schooler should be able to appreciate. There's also some entertaining national stereotypes of French mathematicians and others that probably date the book a bit.

Highly recommended for a math graduate student who needs distraction from work.



Summary: REISSUE THIS!!!
Rating: 5


I am mainly writing a review to see is someone will notice enough to reissue this book. Ya gotta love something that deconstructs counting ('So You Think You Know How To Count?').



Summary: hard to find but worth it
Rating: 5


The jokes are hysterical, although the book may require some smidgeon of knowledge of math past high school trig...



Summary: Brilliant Humor
Rating: 4


One of the funniest books I ever read. Brilliant, on many levels. You also learn a lot about abstract algebra and topology.


Download :

Rapidshare | Seedfile