It’s a coffee table book, but not about coffee tables.
This one is tells the story of 44 early personal computers, and even features my first ever computer, the mighty Acorn Electron. Check it out, I can hear my Mastercard groaning already. Via JD.
It’s a coffee table book, but not about coffee tables.
This one is tells the story of 44 early personal computers, and even features my first ever computer, the mighty Acorn Electron. Check it out, I can hear my Mastercard groaning already. Via JD.
I was checking Amazon for a 2nd hand copy of Build Your Own Database Driven Website Using PHP & MySQL, Second Edition. I found one only to be a little perplexed. Maybe ‘low’ means something different in Amazon land.
It’s interesting to see the rise of corporate blogs, particularly in the IT sector. As a way for companies to get employees talking directly to customers (though not necessarily vice-versa) they seem to be a useful tool. Not to mention going some way to humanising the drones sitting in their hutches within the monolithic evil corporate empire.
Microsoft has a whole bunch of blogs happening, varying from technical to personal and a fair mix in between.
Sun has also jumped on the bandwagon, as has IBM and Borland.
Google has an official blog, a joint effort from various company people, which is the most corporate-like of them all. (Perhaps a tad ironic, since they own Blogger and have a reputation for fostering employee creativity.)
So what’s the real difference between personal and corporate blogs? Well Mark Pilgrim (who has his own blog and an IBM one) reckons a corporate blog is just like a personal blog, except you don’t get to use the word “motherfucker.”
I’ve been meaning to buy a couple of books from sitepoint for a while now. I’ve borrowed a copy of their HTML Utopia: Designing Without Tables Using CSS, a fantastic guide to CSS and their Build Your Own Database Driven Website Using PHP & MySQL looks great so when they emailed me an offer of 20% off this book I thought why not.
That is until I saw the site. Ifyou spend over USD$70 (effectively two books) you get free postage anywhere in the world. Hmmm. Take the offer and save $7 off one book or reject the offer (which takes me below $70), pay full price and save $15?
Regardless, they’re great books.