Kamis, 16 Mei 2013

Wow! eBook: PHP Web Services - 5 new eBooks


Wow! eBook: PHP Web Services - 5 new eBooks

Link to Wow! eBook

PHP Web Services

Posted: 16 May 2013 05:48 AM PDT

Book Description

Whether you're sharing data between two internal systems or building an API so users can access their data, this practical book provides everything you need to build web service APIs with PHP. Author Lorna Jane Mitchell uses code samples, real-world examples, and advice based on her extensive experience to guide you through the process—from the underlying theory to methods for making your service robust.

PHP is ideally suited for both consuming and creating web services. You'll learn how to use this language with JSON, XML, and other web service technologies.

  • Explore HTTP, from the request/response cycle to its verbs, headers, and cookies
  • Determine whether JSON or XML is the best data format for your application
  • Get practical advice for working with RPC, SOAP, and RESTful services
  • Use a variety of tools and techniques for debugging HTTP web services
  • Choose the service that works best for your application, and learn how to make it robust
  • Learn how to document your API—and how to design it to handle errors

Table of Contents
Chapter 1. HTTP
Chapter 2. HTTP Verbs
Chapter 3. Headers
Chapter 4. Cookies
Chapter 5. JSON
Chapter 6. XML
Chapter 7. RPC and SOAP Services
Chapter 8. REST
Chapter 9. Debugging Web Services
Chapter 10. Making Service Design Decisions
Chapter 11. Building a Robust Service
Chapter 12. Error Handling in APIs
Chapter 13. Documentation

Appendix A. A Guide to Common Status Codes
Appendix B. Common HTTP Headers

Book Details

  • Paperback: 118 pages
  • Publisher: O’Reilly Media (April 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1449356567
  • ISBN-13: 978-1449356569
Note: There is a file embedded within this post, please visit this post to download the file.

Related Books

The post PHP Web Services appeared first on Wow! eBook.

Microinteractions

Posted: 16 May 2013 05:45 AM PDT

Book Description

It's the little things that turn a good digital product into a great one. With this practical book, you'll learn how to design effective microinteractions: the small details that exist inside and around features. How can users change a setting? How do they turn on mute, or know they have a new email message?

Through vivid, real-world examples from today's devices and applications, author Dan Saffer walks you through a microinteraction's essential parts, then shows you how to use them in a mobile app, a web widget, and an appliance. You'll quickly discover how microinteractions can change a product from one that's tolerated into one that's treasured.

  • Explore a microinteraction's structure: triggers, rules, feedback, modes, and loops
  • Learn the types of triggers that initiate a microinteraction
  • Create simple rules that define how your microinteraction can be used
  • Help users understand the rules with feedback, using graphics, sounds, and vibrations
  • Use modes to let users set preferences or modify a microinteraction
  • Extend a microinteraction's life with loops, such as "Get data every 30 seconds"

Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Designing Microinteractions
Chapter 2. Triggers
Chapter 3. Rules
Chapter 4. Feedback
Chapter 5. Loops and Modes
Chapter 6. Putting It All Together

Appendix A. Testing Microinteractions

Book Details

  • Paperback: 170 pages
  • Publisher: O’Reilly Media (April 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 144934268X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1449342685
Note: There is a file embedded within this post, please visit this post to download the file.

Related Books

The post Microinteractions appeared first on Wow! eBook.

Managing Startups: Best Blog Posts

Posted: 16 May 2013 05:27 AM PDT

Book Description

If you want salient advice about your startup, you've hit the jackpot with this book. Harvard Business School Professor Tom Eisenmann annually compiles the best posts from many blogs on technology startup management, primarily for the benefit of his students. This book makes his latest collection available to the broader entrepreneur community.

You'll find 72 posts from successful entrepreneurs and venture capitalists, such as Fred Wilson, Steve Blank, Ash Maurya, Joel Spolsky, and Ben Yoskovitz. They cover a wide range of topics essential to your startup's success, including:

  • Management tasks: Engineering, product management, marketing, sales, and business development
  • Organizational issues: Cofounder tensions, recruiting, and career planning
  • Funding: The latest developments in capital markets that affect startups

Divided into 13 areas of focus, the book's contributors explore the metrics you need to run your startup, discuss lean prototyping techniques for hardware, identify costly outsourcing mistakes, provide practical tips on user acquisition, offer branding guidelines, and explain how a choir of angel investors often will sing different parts. And that's just for starters.

Table of Contents
Part I: Lean Startup
Chapter 1. How We Fooled Ourselves into Delaying Our Startup's Launch
Chapter 2. How to Build It: Lean Prototyping Techniques for Hardware
Chapter 3. How Many Metrics Do You Need to Run Your Startup?
Chapter 4. The Lean Stack MVP—A Different Approach
Chapter 5. Software Inventory
Chapter 6. How to Get Out of the Building with the Validation Board

Part II: Business Models
Chapter 7. MBA Mondays: Revenue Models—Commerce
Chapter 8. Freemium Pricing for SaaS: Optimizing Paid Conversion Upgrades
Chapter 9. Why Churn Is So Critical to Success in SaaS
Chapter 10. Achieving the Network Effect: Solving the Chicken or the Egg
Chapter 11. Reverse Network Effects: Why Scale May Be the Biggest Threat Facing Today's Social Networks
Chapter 12. Business Model Canvas for Puppies (Part I)

Part III: Customer Discovery and Validation
Chapter 13. All Customers Are Not Created Equal
Chapter 14. You Shouldn't Use a Survey If…
Chapter 15. A Perfect Use for Personas
Chapter 16. Fucking Ship It Already: Just Not to Everyone at Once
Chapter 17. Stop Validating Your Product
Chapter 18. Using Surveys to Validate Key Startup Decisions

Part IV: Marketing: Demand Generation and Optimization
Chapter 19. Very Basic Startup Marketing
Chapter 20. The Ultimate Guide to Startup Marketing
Chapter 21. What the Highest-Converting Websites Do Differently
Chapter 22. Understanding the Customer Buying Cycle and Triggers
Chapter 23. Building It Is Not Enough: Five Practical Tips on User Acquisition
Chapter 24. Introduction to A/B Testing for Landing Pages
Chapter 25. You Built It But They Didn't Come: Eight Tricks for Marketing Your Mobile App

Part V: Sales, Marketing, and PR Management
Chapter 26. At Times Not Losing Is as Important as Winning
Chapter 27. Nine Ways to Make Your Startup Grow Virally
Chapter 28. Our PR Stinks: Here's What Your Startup Can Learn from It
Chapter 29. Some Tips for Interacting with the Press
Chapter 30. Startup Branding: A Practical Guide for Entrepreneurs

Part VI: Product Management/Product Design
Chapter 31. Sometimes It's Not the Change They Hate
Chapter 32. What You Will/Won't Learn from Usability Testing
Chapter 33. Product Marketing Contribution
Chapter 34. Time-Boxing Product Discovery
Chapter 35. Product Management Then and Now
Chapter 36. Live-Data Prototypes Versus Production
Chapter 37. Continuous Discovery
Chapter 38. The Role of Product Managers
Chapter 39. Why Companies Should Have Product Editors, Not Product Managers
Chapter 40. Five Outsourcing Mistakes That Will Kill Your Startup

Part VII: Business Development and Scaling
Chapter 41. Who You Gonna Call? Partnering with Goliath: A Tale of Two Announcements
Chapter 42. A Recipe for Growth: Adding Layers to the Cake

Part VIII: Funding Strategy
Chapter 43. Micro-VCs and Super Angels Two Years Later: Looking Back and Some Predictions for the Future
Chapter 44. Why Do VCs Have Ownership Targets? And Why 20%?
Chapter 45. How to Evaluate Firms for a Seed VC Syndicate
Chapter 46. A Choir of Angel Investors Sing Different Parts
Chapter 47. Super Pro-Rata Rights Aren't Super

Part IX: Company Culture, Organizational Structure, Recruiting, and Other HR Issues
Chapter 48. Getting Promoted Too Quickly
Chapter 49. Recruiting Developers? Create an Awesome Candidate Experience
Chapter 50. Startups: Stop Trying to Hire Ninja-Rockstar Engineers
Chapter 51. How to Hire Hackers: A Realistic Guide for Startups
Chapter 52. MBA Mondays: Best Hiring Practices
Chapter 53. How to Design a Successful Interview Process for Hiring Top Talent
Chapter 54. Snake-Oil Startup Recruiting
Chapter 55. Recruiting and Culture (MBA Mondays Guest Post)
Chapter 56. Firing
Chapter 57. MBA Mondays: Asking an Employee to Leave the Company
Chapter 58. The Board of Directors—Selecting, Electing, and Evolving

Part X: Startup Failure
Chapter 59. What Goes Wrong
Chapter 60. Why Startups Die

Part XI: Exiting by Selling Your Company
Chapter 61. The Economic Logic Behind Tech and Talent Acquisitions
Chapter 62. Knowing Where the Exits Are

Part XII: The Startup Mindset and Coping with Startup Pressures
Chapter 63. What It's Like to Be the CEO: Revelations and Reflections
Chapter 64. How We Fight—Cofounders in Love and War
Chapter 65. Vision Versus Hallucination—Founders and Pivots
Chapter 66. 50 Startup Lessons Learned in 12 Months
Chapter 67. Advice I Wish I Could Have Given Myself Five Years Ago
Chapter 68. The Only Two Questions Founders Need to Answer
Chapter 69. Once You Take Money, the Clock Starts Ticking
Chapter 70. The Series A Crunch Survivor's Guide

Part XIII: Management and Career Advice
Chapter 71. Selling or Funding a Startup? Tips on Surviving Technical Due Diligence
Chapter 72. Playbook for Incoming MBAs to Start a Company out of School
Chapter 73. Manage Your Tech Career
Chapter 74. Hey Entrepreneur—Please Get an MBA
Chapter 75. Why I Left Consulting and Joined a Startup

Book Details

  • Paperback: 452 pages
  • Publisher: O’Reilly Media (April 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1449367879
  • ISBN-13: 978-1449367879
Note: There is a file embedded within this post, please visit this post to download the file.

Related Books

The post Managing Startups: Best Blog Posts appeared first on Wow! eBook.

Building a DevOps Culture

Posted: 16 May 2013 05:18 AM PDT

Book Description

Building a DevOps culture requires more than installing a configuration management system, using a source code repository, and telling your teams “Ok, now we are all doing DevOps.” Organizational culture is comprised of a shared set of values and behaviors. Tools help us create process, which in turn influences our behaviors. Unfortunately, tools alone aren’t enough to create a stable culture for collaboration that we now think of as DevOps. Building, or in many cases rebuilding, our team cultures to reflect changing goals and values is a challenge faced not just by teams transitioning to DevOps, but by organizations large and small as they try to keep up with current business practices and customer expectations. This article outlines strategies for building a DevOps culture, including aligning incentives, defining meaningful and achievable goals, and creating a supportive team environment.

Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. What Is Organizational Culture?
Chapter 3. What Exactly Makes a Culture "DevOps"?
Chapter 4. Ready, Set, Change
Chapter 5. Mentoring the New Culture
Chapter 6. Checkpoints and Declaring Victory

Book Details

  • Paperback: 26 pages
  • Publisher: O’Reilly Media (April 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1449364179
  • ISBN-13: 978-1449364175
Note: There is a file embedded within this post, please visit this post to download the file.

Related Books

The post Building a DevOps Culture appeared first on Wow! eBook.

The Minimalist Photographer

Posted: 16 May 2013 05:14 AM PDT

Book Description

This book covers photography from a minimalist perspective, proving that it is possible to take very good photographs with relatively cheap equipment. The minimalist process emphasizes the importance of first knowing what you want to achieve as a photographer and then choosing the most effective equipment, subject matter, and general approach to meet your goals. The minimalist photographer works with the idea that the brain and the eye are far more important than the camera.

Author Steve Johnson begins by asking you, the reader, to look inward and make the connections between your nature and your photography. Why do you want to take photographs and what subject matter are you attracted to? What type of photographer are you now and what type of photographer would you like to become? These are important questions to consider when deciding what approach works best for you.

In subsequent chapters, you’ll learn about the equipment and workflow of a minimalist photographer as Johnson discusses the strengths and weaknesses of various types of cameras and explains why the biggest or most expensive piece of equipment is not always the best. He also addresses the importance of lighting and teaches you how to achieve effective lighting without spending a lot of money.

Also included are discussions about aesthetics and composition, as well as a brief history of photography and the future of the art form.

Table of Contents
Chapter 1. You
Chapter 2. A Minimalist Approach
Chapter 3. The Basics
Chapter 4. The Camera
Chapter 5. Light
Chapter 6. Composition and Aesthetics
Chapter 7. Photography Philosophy
Chapter 8. A History of Photography
Chapter 9. What Next?

Book Details

  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Rocky Nook (April 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1937538095
  • ISBN-13: 978-1937538095
Note: There is a file embedded within this post, please visit this post to download the file.

Related Books

The post The Minimalist Photographer appeared first on Wow! eBook.

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar