Aug7th

cycle world magazine june 2008

Posted at 1:43 pm | Filed Under Uncategorized

scanned magazine
june 2008

cycle world magazine june 2008
Aug7th

STERN 33/2008 - ORIGINAL !

Posted at 1:14 pm | Filed Under Uncategorized

Weekly Magazine

PW: @rcc@

Aug7th

Everyday Practical Electronics August 2008

Posted at 12:42 pm | Filed Under Uncategorized

Everyday Practical Electronics August 2008

Everyday Practical Electronics August 2008
Aug7th

Sciantific American August 2008

Posted at 11:41 am | Filed Under Uncategorized

Sciantific American August 2008

Sciantific American August 2008
Aug7th

Servo Magazine August 2008

Posted at 11:15 am | Filed Under Uncategorized

Servo Magazine August 2008

Servo Magazine August 2008
Aug7th

Nuts Volts Magazine August 2008

Posted at 10:33 am | Filed Under Uncategorized

Nuts Volts Magazine August 2008

Nuts Volts Magazine August 2008
Aug7th

Amazing Spider-Man (526-550)(Marvel Comics)

Posted at 8:42 am | Filed Under Uncategorized

Spider-Man first appeared in the comic book Amazing Fantasy #15 (Aug. 1962). The series was cancelled with that issue, but response to the character was so positive that a solo title, The Amazing Spider-Man, was launched with a March 1963 cover-date.

The character was created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist and co-plotter Steve Ditko, and the pair produced 38 issues from 1963 to 1966. Since then, many writers and artists have taken over the monthly comic through the years, chronicling the adventures of Marvel’s most identifiable hero.

The Amazing Spider-Man is the character’s flagship series. Most of the major characters and villains of the Spider-Man saga have been introduced here, and it is where key events occur. The title was published continuously until 1998 when Marvel Comics relaunched it with a new issue #1 (Jan. 1999), but on Spider-Man’s 40th anniversary, this new title reverted to using the numbering of the original series, beginning again with issue #500 (Dec. 2003)

For more info:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Amazing_Spider-Man_(comic_book)

Aug7th

Do-It-Yourself Advertising & Promotion: How to Produce Great Ads, Brochures, Catalogs, Direct Mail, and Much More

Posted at 4:26 am | Filed Under Uncategorized

Find the right medium for your message—and your budget with

Praise for the First Edition

"Mr. Hahn's background in an industry where the creative stretching of promotional budgets is a daily necessity serves well the reader of this book. His advice is both practical and imaginative, and delivered with wit as well as wisdom." —Andrew McNally III, Chairman of the Board, Rand McNally.

Getting the word out about your business has never been easier. The brand new edition of this comprehensive guide gives you complete practical coverage of today's major forms of advertising, including up-to-date information on the latest techniques using the Internet, desktop publishing, broadcast fax technology, and more.

Do-It-Yourself Advertising & Promotion: How to Produce Great Ads, Brochures, Catalogs, Direct Mail, and Much More
Aug6th

Head First Java, 2nd Edition

Posted at 12:07 pm | Filed Under Uncategorized

It has taken four years, but with Head First Java the introductory Java book category has finally come of age. This is an excellent book, far more capable than any of the scores of Java-for-novices books that have come before it. Kathy Sierra and Bert Bates deserve rich kudos–and big sales–for developing this book's new way of teaching the Java programming language, because any reader with even a little bit of discipline will come away with true understanding of how the language works. Perhaps best of all, this is no protracted "Hello, World" introductory guide. Readers get substantial exposure to object-oriented design and implementation, serialization, neatwork programming, threads, and Remote Method Invocation (RMI).

Key to the authors' teaching style are carefully designed graphics. Rather than explain class inheritance (to cite one example) primarily with text, the authors use a series of tree diagrams that clarify the mechanism far more succinctly. The diagrams are carefully annotated with arrows and notes. Also characteristic of the unique teaching strategy is heavy reliance on exercises, in which the reader is asked to complete partial classes, write whole new code segments and do design work. Though there's little discussion of why the exercises' correct answers are what they are, it's clear that the practice work was carefully designed to reinforce the lesson at hand. If you've waited this long to give Java a try, this book is a great choice.

Head First Java, 2nd Edition
Aug6th

National Geographic August 2008

Posted at 11:19 am | Filed Under Uncategorized

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