| Biographies Books |
1. The Difference Between God and Larry Ellison: *God Doesn't Think He's Larry Ellison 2. The Road Ahead: Completely Revised and Up-to-Date 3. The Second Coming of Steve Jobs 4. The Man Behind the Microchip: Robert Noyce and the Invention of Silicon Valley 5. Play Money: Or, How I Quit My Day Job and Made Millions Trading Virtual Loot 6. Authoritas: One Student's Harvard Admissions and the Founding of the Facebook Era 7. The Watchman: The Twisted Life and Crimes of Serial Hacker Kevin Poulsen 8. 21 Dog Years : A Cube Dweller's Tale 9. The Essential Guide to Computing: The Story of Information Technology (Essential Guide Series) (Essential Guide Series) 10. Origins of the Crash: The Great Bubble and Its Undoing
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Coppola Returns to 'The Outsiders' (AP) (Yahoo! News - Entertainment - Movies) AP - After the critical and commercial disaster of "One From the Heart" and the failure of his Zoetrope movie studio, a bankrupt Francis Ford Coppola found himself at "the beginning of a very continuing low period."
When Size Really Matters: Smallest Flash Cards You can find CompactFlash memory cards today with capacities of up to 8 GB, and 4 GB Secure Digital flash (SD) cards are just around the corner. While rather small, their size still makes them unsuitable for use in ultra-small devices like cellphones, smart phones, PDAs, and so forth. Here, we take a look at smaller memory formats, including MMCmicro and MicroSD, which promise mass data storage in truly tiny packages.
Sabre Foundation White Paper Offers New Digital Paths For Philanthropy To Make Nonprofits Self-Funding An 11-month research project concludes that "digital donations" can leverage policy change, public land transfers, and skills to make nonprofit groups self-funding in troubled areas of the world. The Sabre Foundation-sponsored, and Whitehead Foundation-backed, research conclusions are now being applied in countries including Kyrgyzstan and Sri Lanka. [PRWEB Oct 12, 2005]
New Tungsten E2 Accessories from Proporta Proporta recently announced new accessories for the palmOne Tungsten E2: Alu-Leather Case (Flip Type), Alu-Leather Case (Book Type), Aluminium Case, Silicone Case, Advanced Screen Protector, 3 in 1 Stylus, and USB HotSync and Charger Cable
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| Books - Digital Business & Culture -
Biographies |

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The Difference Between God and Larry Ellison: *God Doesn't Think He's Larry Ellison
Authors: Mike Wilson. Paperback, 420 pagesPublisher: Collins Business Publication Date: 2003-11-01 Reviews :
Larry Ellison started the high-flying tech company Oracle with $1,200 in 1977 and turned it into a billion-dollar Silicon Valley giant. If Bill Gates is the tech world's nerd king, Ellison is its Warren Beatty: racing yachts, buying jets, and romancing beautiful women. His rise to fame and fortune is a tale of entrepreneurial brilliance, ruthless tactics, and a constant stream of half-truths and outright fabrications for which the man and his company are notorious. Investigative reporter Mike Wilson, with access to Ellison himself and more than 125 of his friends, enemies, and former Oracle employees, has created an eye-opening, utterly fascinating portrayal of a Silicon Valley success story ... filled with the stuff that dreams and cultural icons are made of. ...

It seems like all of the biggest names in the computer industry are getting the celebrity bio treatment these days. But no corporate CEO deserves it more than Larry Ellison, the charismatic head of Oracle Corp. This isn't your standard, dry, "learn-from-his-example" type of life. It's not that Ellison's life doesn't offer the same lessons in hard-won business success as some of his colleague's, because it certainly does. It's just vastly more entertaining. In The Difference Between God and Larry Ellison, author Mike Wilson delivers a fascinating and genuinely interesting portrayal of Silicon Valley's most notorious bad boy, constructed from hundreds of interviews with friends, colleagues, and those unfortunate enough to stand in Ellison's way. There are plenty of behind-the-scenes stories of the growth and worldwide success of Oracle, which Ellison founded in 1977. Plus, there's plenty of the good stuff: tales of Ellison's truly fast-lane lifestyle, filled with big boats, beautiful women, and celebrity friends. While this book probably won't transform you into a fan of Ellison's, you will be grateful for a chance to observe him--from a safe distance. The punchline is "God doesn't think he's Larry Ellison," of course....

$15.95
New Price: $0.09
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The Road Ahead: Completely Revised and Up-to-Date
Authors: Bill Gates. Nathan Myhrvold. Peter Rinearson. Paperback, 332 pagesPublisher: Penguin Books Publication Date: 1996-11-01 Edition: Revised Reviews :

In a study complete with CD-ROM, the founder of Microsoft presents his vision for the future in which he sees the digital technologies of the coming years changing the way we buy, work, learn, and communicate. Reprint....
$15.95
New Price: $1.22
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The Second Coming of Steve Jobs
Authors: Alan Deutschman. Paperback, 352 pagesPublisher: Broadway Publication Date: 2001-09-11 Edition: 1 Reviews :

From the acclaimed Vanity Fair and GQ journalist–an unprecedented, in-depth portrait of the man whose return to Apple precipitated one of the biggest turnarounds in business history. With a new epilogue on Apple’s future survival in today’s roller-coaster economy, here is the revealing biography that blew away the critics and stirred controversy within industry and media circles around the country....

For the legions who revere Apple Computer's high-profile cofounder as a godlike figure, the aptly titled Second Coming of Steve Jobs will prove an intriguing picture of a seminal time in their deity's roller-coaster life. It should emphatically vindicate their deeply held faith in the man and his ideas. But even for those with a lesser opinion, Alan Deutschman offers an interesting and enlightening look at the crucial period from Jobs's unceremonious Apple exit through his triumphant return. Deutschman, a contributing editor at Vanity Fair magazine and longtime Silicon Valley correspondent, interviewed nearly 100 colleagues and friends to draw this portrait of a bewilderingly complex and notoriously private man--albeit one whose talents, personality traits, and idiosyncrasies have long been on public display. "He succeeded in becoming the Jackie Kennedy Onassis of business and technology," Deutschman writes, "a figure who was ubiquitous as a symbol of his times but little known as a human being." To change that, he looks into Jobs's ill-fated first post-Apple endeavor at the Next computer company, his return to undeniable respectability with Pixar and the two Toy Story movies, and finally, his ultimate absolution with a very successful reclamation of the Apple crown. It's a revealing account of a singular individual during a remarkable time. --Howard Rothman ...
$19
New Price: $10.5
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The Man Behind the Microchip: Robert Noyce and the Invention of Silicon Valley
Authors: Leslie Berlin. Paperback, 440 pagesPublisher: Oxford University Press, USA Publication Date: 2006-11-13 Reviews :

Hailed as the Thomas Edison and Henry Ford of Silicon Valley, Robert Noyce was a brilliant inventor, a leading entrepreneur, and a daring risk taker who piloted his own jets and skied mountains accessible only by helicopter. Now, in The Man Behind the Microchip, Leslie Berlin captures not only this colorful individual but also the vibrant interplay of technology, business, money, politics, and culture that defines Silicon Valley. Here is the life of a high-tech industry giant. The co-founder of Fairchild Semiconductor and Intel, Noyce co-invented the integrated circuit, the electronic heart of every modern computer, automobile, cellular telephone, advanced weapon, and video game. With access to never-before-seen documents, Berlin paints a fascinating portrait of Noyce: an ambitious and intensely competitive multimillionaire who exuded a "just folks" sort of charm, a Midwestern preacher's son who rejected organized religion but would counsel his employees to "go off and do something wonderful," a man who never looked back and sometimes paid a price for it. In addition, this vivid narrative sheds light on Noyce's friends and associates, including some of the best-known managers, venture capitalists, and creative minds in Silicon Valley. Berlin draws upon interviews with dozens of key players in modern American business--including Andy Grove, Steve Jobs, Gordon Moore, and Warren Buffett; their recollections of Noyce give readers a privileged, first-hand look inside the dynamic world of high-tech entrepreneurship. A modern American success story, The Man Behind the Microchip illuminates the triumphs and setbacks of one of the most important inventors and entrepreneurs of our time....
$21.95
New Price: $3.6
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Play Money: Or, How I Quit My Day Job and Made Millions Trading Virtual Loot
Authors: Julian Dibbell. Paperback, 336 pagesPublisher: Basic Books Publication Date: 2007-09-10 Reviews :
Play Money explores the remarkable new phenomenon of MMORPGs, or Massively MultiPlayer Online Role-Playing Games, in which hundreds of thousands of players operate fantasy characters in virtual environments. With city-sized populations, these games generate their own cultures, governments, and social systems and, inevitably, their own economies, which spill over into the real world. The desire for virtual goods-magic swords, enchanted breastplates, and special, hard-to-get elixirs-has spawned a cottage industry of “virtual loot farmers”: people who play the games just to obtain fantasy goods that they can sell in the real world. The best loot farmers can make between six figures a year and six figures a month. Play Money is an extended walk on the weird side: a vivid snapshot of a subculture whose denizens were once the stuff of mere sociological spectacle but now-with computer gaming poised to eclipse all otherentertainments in dollar volume, and with the lines between play and work, virtual and real increasingly blurred-look more and more like the future. ...
$15.95
New Price: $5.65
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Apple Specialists Pavilion Unveiled at Macworld Boston; Wide ... FinanzNachrichten.de, Germany -... Owned and produced by Framingham Mass.-based IDG World Expo, Macworld Conference & Expo is the world's most comprehensive Macintosh OS event. ...
Sprint PCS Features Metallica Tunes as Ringtones for July (Mobilemag.com) You went to the concerts, bought the albums, downloaded their MP3s (legally of course) and maybe at some point even sported the Metallica ?look?. Well don?t stop there, download ?Fade to Black? and have it as the ringtone of your Sprint PCS mobile
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Authoritas: One Student's Harvard Admissions and the Founding of the Facebook Era
Authors: Aaron Greenspan. Hardcover, 335 pagesPublisher: Think Press Publication Date: 2008-06-01 Edition: 1st Reviews :

Aaron Greenspan was just like any other recent Harvard graduate until the day he read that his invention, a web site called The Facebook, was worth billions of dollars and someone else was taking the credit. Trying to find the rationale behind an unbelievable tale of ingenuity, triumph and betrayal, Greenspan sat down to write his story, and emerged with a book that follows a boy and his autistic brother from public school to the hyper-competitive college admissions process to the gates of Harvard Yard and beyond. A true story that sheds light on the American educational system, the immense challenges of coping with autism, and of course, the astronomical growth of The Facebook, Authoritas is an engrossing account of life that any student, parent, teacher or entrepreneur will relate to....
$25.95
New Price: $12.97
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The Watchman: The Twisted Life and Crimes of Serial Hacker Kevin Poulsen
Authors: Jonathan Littman. Hardcover, 304 pagesPublisher: Little, Brown and Company Publication Date: 1997-03-31 Edition: 1st Reviews :

Written like a California noir thriller by way of William Gibson, The Watchman brings to life the wildest, most audacious crime spree in the history of cyberspace. Busted as a teenager for hacking into Pac Bell phone networks, Kevin Poulsen would find his punishment was a job with a Silicon Valley defense contractor. By day he seemed to have gone straight, toiling on systems for computer-aided war. But by night he burglarized telephone switching offices, adopting the personae and aliases of his favorite comic-book anti heroes - the Watchmen. When authorities found a locker crammed with swiped telecommunications equipment, Poulsen became a fugitive from the FBI, living the life of a cyberpunk in a neon Hollywood underground. Soon he made the front pages of the New York Times and became the first hacker charged with espionage. Littman takes us behind the headlines and into the world of Poulsen and his rogues' gallery of cyberthieves. Drawing on hundreds of hours of interviews with Poulsen, his confederates, and the authorities, he spins a thrilling chase story on the electronic frontier. The nation's phone network was Poulsen's playground. On Los Angeles's lucrative radio giveaways, Poulsen worked his magic, winning Porsches and tens of thousands of dollars. He secretly switched on the numbers of defunct Yellow Pages escort ads and took his cut of the profits. And he could wiretap or electronically stalk whomever he pleased, his childhood love or movie stars. The FBI seemed no match for Poulsen. But as Unsolved Mysteries prepared a broadcast on the hacker's crimes, LAPD vice stumbled onto his trail, and an undercover operation began on Sunset Strip....

This is a first-rate detective story--and all true. It's the story of a seemingly invincible electronic thief, con man, and stalker--and the people who tracked him down. Jonathan Littman brings his readers straight into the world of cyberpunk crime as he shows the origins, development, and climax of the wildest and most audacious known crime spree in cyberspace. Hundreds of hours of interviews allow Littman to tell much of the story through the eyes of those who lived it, and his own edgy style and excellent pacing make for a thriller that's hard to put down....
$30
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21 Dog Years : A Cube Dweller's Tale
Authors: Mike Daisey. Paperback, 224 pagesPublisher: Free Press Publication Date: 2003-08-26 Reviews :

In 1998, when Amazon.com began to recruit employees, they gave temp agencies a simple directive: send us your freaks. Mike Daisey -- slacker, onetime aesthetics major -- fit the bill. His subsequent ascension, over the course of twenty-one dog years, from lowly temp to customer service representative to business development hustler is the stuff of both dreams and nightmares. Here, with lunatic precision, Daisey describes lightless cube farms in which book orders were scrawled on Post-its while technicians struggled to bring computers back online, as well as fourteen-hour days fueled by caffeine, fanaticism, and illicit day-trading from office desks made out of doors. You'll meet Warren, the cowboy of customer service, capable of verbally hog-tying even the most abusive customer; Amazon employee #5, a computer gamer who spends at least six hours a day locked in his office killing goblins but is worth a cool $300 million; and Jean-Michele, Daisey's girlfriend and sparring partner, who tries to keep him grounded, even as dot-com mania seduces them both. Punctuated by Daisey's hysterically honest fictional missives to CEO Jeff Bezos, 21 Dog Years is an epic story of greed, self-deception, and heartbreak -- a wickedly funny anthem to an era of bounteous stock options and boundless insanity....

$16.95
New Price: $3.69
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The Essential Guide to Computing: The Story of Information Technology (Essential Guide Series) (Essential Guide Series)
Authors: E. Garrison Walters. Paperback, 528 pagesPublisher: Prentice Hall PTR Publication Date: 2000-08-11 Reviews :

The Complete, easy-to-understand guide to IT-now and in the future! Computers, networks, and pervasive computing Hardware, operating systems, and software How networks work: LANs, WANs, and the Internet E-business, the Web, and security...

Lots of circumstances conspired to make information technology what it is today. Business decisions (both wise and foolish), scientific discoveries (both old and recent), marketing campaigns (founded both in truth and otherwise), and plenty of random chance have played parts in defining the industrial, social, and cultural phenomena that personal and business computing have become. The Essential Guide to Computing: The Story of Information Technology tells the technical, commercial, and social stories behind the electronic computer and related technologies, such as telecommunications and software development. Along the way, author E. Garrison Walters reveals a lot of general knowledge about computers. This book is highly readable. It's essentially a general-interest nonfiction book, and a good one, at that. As you read this book, you can't avoid picking up the little technical facts that have become part of our culture, particularly its younger parts. What's an embedded operating system? What's object-oriented programming? What is the open-source movement? Walters teaches you enough about these subjects--and the ways in which they fit together--to enable you to speak intelligently about them and perform further research, as your needs require. You'll enjoy this book, regardless of your level of computer expertise or your area of specialization, because you're sure to learn something and enjoy the process. --David Wall Topics covered: The state of the art in electronic computing, data storage, and data communications, in a historical context. The operations of processors, memory chips, persistent storage devices (e.g., disks), and other hardware subsystems. Software development--including compression, encryption, and the challenges and promise of parallel computing--receives attention. Ditto for network communications infrastructures, protocols, and applications. It's all explained in detail and with style....

$44.99
New Price: $16
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Origins of the Crash: The Great Bubble and Its Undoing
Authors: Roger Lowenstein. Paperback, 288 pagesPublisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) Publication Date: 2004-12-28 Reviews :

With his singular gift for turning complex financial events into eminently readable stories, Roger Lowenstein lays bare the labyrinthine events of the manic and tumultuous 1990s. In an enthralling narrative, he ties together all of the characters of the dot-com bubble and offers a unique portrait of the culture of the era. Just as John Kenneth Galbraith’s The Great Crash was a defining text of the Great Depression, Lowenstein’s Origins of the Crash is destined to be the book that will frame our understanding of the 1990s....
$15
New Price: $1.65
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Computers & Internet News |
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BenQ DW1625 Internal DVD Writer with LightScribe Past attempts of etching permanent and professional looking designs on CDs were received with lukewarm response at best, but that hasn't discouraged BenQ from taking a stab in a similar technology called LightScribe. We gave their latest DW1625 a spin and here's our views.
Rentacomputer.com Introduces (LSS) Legal Support Services Rentacomputer.com LSS is renting technology for the legal profession. [PRWEB Aug 1, 2005]
News Briefs Short IT news items.
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