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Book reviews for "Powell,_David_A." sorted by average review score:

Nemeton: A Fables Anthology
Published in Paperback by Silver Lake Publishing (23 December, 2000)
Authors: Megan Powell, David Bowlin, Terry Bramlett, Jason Brannon, Alan Bruce, Stephen Crane Davidson, Kate Hill, Stuart Jaffe, Shawn James, and Lloyd Michael Lohr
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A cool mix
This is collection of short stories that offers a wide mix of speculative genres. Fantasy, SF, horror, and just plain weird. The stories run the gambit and most are good. "Jeo Defined" and "Moon Warrior" were excellent stories and well worth purchasing the book. Even just the so-so stories were enjoyable and all the authors are names to keep a look out for. In the end, this is a book of up and coming writers and a few of them will no doubt be big names someday.

A Great Read
I didn't know what to expect from this collection of short stories but I was happily surprised. The stories cover a wide range from fantasy, science fiction, and horror to those hard to classify strange stories. Each one is worth reading. My favorites were the one about a radio personality who was singing the Siren's song and the one about a criminal who is forced to undergo "augmentation" to control him. Some wild stuff for a great read.


Special Edition Using Delphi 3
Published in Paperback by Que (1997)
Authors: Todd Miller, David Powell, Roland Bouchereau, Julian Bucknall, Bill Curtis, Scott Frolich, Joe C. Hecht, Chaim Krause, Mark Pritchard, and Noel Rice
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Great book for intermediate Delphi programmers!
If you have programmed in another language before, but not Delphi, this is the book for you. After a quick overview of general programming concepts, Pascal data types, etc., it goes into a thorough description of the Delphi 3 language and features. I did wish that it had more info on database programming--5 chapters wasn't enough for me!

Excellent Advanced-Expert book
This is one of my favorite Delphi 3 books, as it covers material not easily found elsewhere. This is not a beginner's book by any means. The coverage of DLLs, COM, and threading is outstanding. This is a book for those who want to delve more deeply into the relationships between VCLs and the WinAPI.

The Best Delphi 3.0 Book I've Read
I purchased this book with a view to learning more about OLE and COM which is covered very comprehensively. But I found that once I started reading the other chapters I could not put the book down. Some people have commented that this book is a poor teaching aid. This is not what this book sets out to do. QUE's guide puts this book at Accomplished to Expert level. If you are an experienced, professional programmer who needs an excellent reference book, buy this. You will not regret it.


Bad Boys of the Book of Mormon : And What They Teach Us
Published in Paperback by Publication Consultants (01 August, 1999)
Authors: Davis S. Powell, David Swensen Powell, and E. Donald Ainge
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Simple and useful
Original approach (learning from bad characters in the Book of Mormon) presented in a simple format (very useful for Sunday, home teaching and new converts readings alike). I enjoyed the reading, and recommend it be translated in more languages so to be used abroad. Waiting for Swenson Powell's next book.


Powell-Smith & Sims' Building Contract Claims
Published in Hardcover by Blackwell Science Inc (1998)
Authors: David Chappell and Vincent Building Contract Claims Powell-Smith
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the 1st book for claims administrator
Right! this is the 1st reference book for those who work as a claim administration or those of QS graduate.
This book introduces the basic principle of british construction contracts, in particular the JCT63, leading to the development of other JCT standard form of contracts nowsaday.
Recommended read sequence on:
Liquidated Damages
EOT clauses
Claims and
Sub-contract Claims...
Cheers,
RMC - Ricky Chan


Rhapsodies in Black: Art of the Harlem Renaissance
Published in Paperback by South Bank Centre (1997)
Authors: Richard J. Powell, David A. Bailey, Hayward Gallery, Institute of International Visual Arts, and University of California Press
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expanding the scope of a central moment in modern art
This book provides those who are more likely to have believed the Harlem Renaissance to be entirely literary and entirely Harlem-centered with evidence of the all-encompassing scope and international import of this crucial, modern, blackened artistic surge. The exploration of black identity and construction of black nationality called the Harlem Renaissance is insightfully revisited through the social and artistic problems enacted in the works, within the voices, and upon the bodies of protagonists: Josephine Baker, Paul Robeson, and surprisingly, Orson Welles. This book is a fine complement to books which focus on literary-hitsorical aspects (such as David L. Lewis' _When Harlem was in Vogue_) and those which focus on music such as Angela Davis' _Blues Legacies and Black Feminism_ and Albert Murray's _Stomping the Blues_). It is a a fabulous expansion of the artistic territory encompassed in black art. Maya Angleou has said: "I am human, and therefore nothing h! uman can escape my grasp." I believe that black art has languished too long in the storage bin where fads and fanices go to die. _Black Rhapsodies_ rescues the Renaissance from this fate by positing black art as a philosphical stance, therefore attainable in varied ways throughout the post WWI world--not as the exotic and undisciplined, irregular expressions of primitive black jungle souls on the drum-pulsing streets of 20s Harlem. I couldn't agree more, and I hope that the idea that black art is both a real category and a complex one full of contadictions is adopted in the teaching of the Renaissance.

My one complaint is minor and may stem from my own unfamiliarity with the indexing system of books on art. I found it difficult to locate quickly the visual art being described in certain passages. If there were a more convenient way on idexing the art or of expaining the system to the novice reader, it would be appreciated.


Web Site Engineering: Beyond Web Page Design
Published in Paperback by Prentice Hall PTR (1998)
Authors: Thomas A. Powell, David L. Jones, and Dominique C. Cutts
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A book for dummies
This book is not for engineers, but for dummies. It only covers very basic aspects of website design and does not offer any methodology for a website engineer.

Not a serious book, even for managers.
This book says it discusses a lot more than it really does. It will waste your time. There is no value in this book unless you have never read anything about the Internet, web sites, and light software project management.

Really about Web Site Life Cycle Management & Sys Eng.
I got this book to update my professional skills. My technical specialties are service delivery and production support, and my background is in traditional data center environments. With more than 25 years of mainframe and distributed computing I felt that I had better get up-to-date or I'd be left behind.

Based on the title I was expecting a book that would give me insights into how web sites are developed with an emphasis on capacity and performance planning. Although this wasn't exactly what I was looking for it seemed to be close enough to give a basis for extrapolating what I needed. As it turned out, the book provided me with exactly what I needed: a clear view into web site development and deployment that is framed in a life cycle structure.

It starts out with an overview of software engineering principles (not development techniques) and quickly emphasizes the need for process models. This is followed by some basics about the web, networking and how the web works. This is pretty fundamental stuff that can be safely skipped by experienced web developers who are interested in the process. Since I am not a developer and relatively new to the technology I liked this section.

The [system] engineering process begins in chapter 4, and follows a standard life cycle model for the remainder of the book. Problem definition, concept exploration and feasibility analysis are given standard treatment - this is systems analysis 101 material, but is thoroughly covered and a good refresher. The same holds true for the chapter on requirements analysis and specification. When you arrive at chapter 6, Designing the Web Site, the unique requirements of web design are highlighted and the book becomes very interesting. I like the way application and information are distinguished, and the emphasis placed on usability. This is a marked departure from how systems were developed during the early days in my career when the user interface and human factors were an afterthought - if they were thought of at all.

Chapter 7 is the only place in the book where any "web engineering" is addressed. I personally learned a lot from the discussions of client- and server-side technologies, tools and content management. However, an experienced web developer might find this material to be lightweight.

The rest of the book placed implementation, testing, promotion into production and ongoing management into a familiar context that faithfully follows traditional life cycle and production support methods. I was gratified to see the emphasis on testing, release and post-implementation management because I do not see these in practice when it comes to web implementations.

My view of web development and implementation prior to reading this book was that it is performed by extremely bright-but undisciplined-men and women who did not understand processes. This is based on personal observations of web projects - the projects all seemed to end after development and "thrown over the wall" to production support. Testing is hit-or-miss and there is no real release methodology. This approach usually results in web sites that are chronically broken, and if commerce is involved, do not have the trust of users.

This book provides a clear roadmap for "engineering" and implementing a web site the right way. It starts with proven processes and aligns them to the fast cycle times and rapid implementation needs that characterize information technology in today's world. If you are an IT or project manager this book will provide you with excellent guidelines for a web development and implementation methodology. If you are working in production support you need to get this book into the hands of the team who will surely try to slip their web site into your domain - this book will communicate your requirements to them in their language.


Canyons of the Colorado
Published in Paperback by Chronicle Books (1996)
Authors: Joseph Holmes, John Wesley Powell, and David Ross Brower
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Contents are superb, but spoiled by bad organization.
As prior reviews state, the text is well-selected from Powell's journal, and the photographs are superb. But how can the author publish the journal of an explorer without a map keyed to the dates of journal entries? The photographs are superb, but again, not keyed to a map, or even associated with the text. The identifying data for each photo is listed in the front of the book, but is not given on, or near the photograph. A potentially superb book, but, because of these defects and faults, one that is maddening to read.


Feedback Control of Dynamic Systems
Published in Hardcover by Prentice Hall (15 January, 2002)
Authors: Gene F. Franklin, J. David Powell, and Abbas Emami-Naeini
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I liked the pictures
I could just ditto all the stuff that guy from New Mexico wrote. I had the same experience with trying to work out the problems at the end of the chapters. It's almost like we had the same class or something. Weird. Anyway there was some good stuff in the book, especially all those block diagrams. The authors are from the left coast, so if you are used to A,B,C, and D in your control block diagrams the F,G,H, and J could throw you off. Happy reading.

Toomuch content too little explanation
The problem with this book is it has a lot of content, tries to explain just about everything there is in controls and does not care to explain out the details ... its pretty tough if are do-it-yourself kind... But many of the things in this book are not in other books (or are better explained in advanced control books). It literally took out my interst in Controls. Certainly not a book for beginners.

Good
The book is very good for individual study because of its step-by-step approach. However, it is difficult to use for classroom instruction. By teh way, there is an excellent Solutions Manual available from the publisher, which I would recommend for instructors.It uses MATLAB extensively. ISBN 0-201-59937-6,Addsion Wesley 1994.


Hunger of the Heart: Communion at the Wall
Published in Paperback by Islewest Pub (1996)
Authors: Larry Powell, Cara Sutherland, and David Lebelle
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Restructuring the Professional Organisation: Accounting, Health Care and Law
Published in Paperback by Routledge (05 November, 1999)
Authors: David Brock, Michael Powell, and C. R. Hinings
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