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Biography of Jonathan Oxer, currently Director at Freetronics, previously Presenter at SuperHouse Automation and Presenter at SuperHouse Automation.
There are thousands of books which try to turn you into a web developer. This is not one of them! Most business operators couldn't care less about browser compliance, XHTML, and cascading stylesheets. They don't want to become web developers: they're too busy getting on with business. How To Build A Website And Stay Sane is a plain-talking survival guide for business operators who want to find a good developer and not get ripped off. It explains the strategies behind many highly successful websites. It shows you how to find a good developer; balance short versus long term costs; streamline site maintenance; and make informed decisions when creating or redesigning your site. Jonathan Oxer has been instrumental in the development of hundreds of websites and in this book he speaks from over a decade of experience, guiding you through the process used to develop some of the most successful sites on the Internet. This book will save you time and money - and help make your online venture a success.
Ubuntu Linux--the most popular Linux distribution on the planet--preserves the spirit embodied in the ancient African word ubuntu, which means both "humanity to others" and "I am what I am because of who we all are." Ubuntu won the Linux Journal Reader's Choice Award for best Linux distribution and is consistently the top-ranked Linux variant on DistroWatch.com. The reason this distribution is so widely popular is that Ubuntu is designed to be useful, usable, customizable, and always available for free worldwide. Ubuntu Hacks is your one-stop source for all of the community knowledge you need to get the most out of Ubuntu: a collection of 100 tips and tools to help new and experienced Linux ...
Create your own Arduino-based designs, gain in-depth knowledge of the architecture of Arduino, and learn the user-friendly Arduino language all in the context of practical projects that you can build yourself at home. Get hands-on experience using a variety of projects and recipes for everything from home automation to test equipment. Arduino has taken off as an incredibly popular building block among ubicomp (ubiquitous computing) enthusiasts, robotics hobbyists, and DIY home automation developers. Authors Jonathan Oxer and Hugh Blemings provide detailed instructions for building a wide range of both practical and fun Arduino-related projects, covering areas such as hobbies, automotive, com...
Google AdWords is instant gratification for marketing junkies, but this plain-language guide shows that it's not just for gurus: even raw beginners can get started with AdWords and have their first campaign up and running in well under an hour for only a few dollars a day. This guide will walk you through the steps of getting started with AdWords and show you how to segment your ad campaigns, track results, and maximise the results of your marketing investment. Go from marketing-zero to AdWords Hero in under 60 minutes!
The Arduino is a cheap, flexible, open source microcontroller platform designed to make it easy for hobbyists to use electronics in homemade projects. With an almost unlimited range of input and output add-ons, sensors, indicators, displays, motors, and more, the Arduino offers you countless ways to create devices that interact with the world around you. In Arduino Workshop, you'll learn how these add-ons work and how to integrate them into your own projects. You'll start off with an overview of the Arduino system but quickly move on to coverage of various electronic components and concepts. Hands-on projects throughout the book reinforce what you've learned and show you how to apply that kn...
"Tips & tools for customizing and optimizing your OS"--Cover.
The first magazine devoted entirely to do-it-yourself technology projects presents its 30th quarterly edition for people who like to tweak, disassemble, recreate, and invent cool new uses for technology. Until recently, home automation was an unfulfilled promise -- systems were gimmicky, finicky, user-hostile, or potentially unsecure. But today, thanks to a new crop of devices and technologies, home automation is useful, fun, and maker-friendly. Using smartphones, wireless networks, the internet, simple microcontrollers, and even gesture recognition, DIY-style Smart Homes can now do everything promised and more, for much less -- and MAKE shows you how in Volume 30.
Annotation 'This Pervasive Day' explores the potential - and possible pitfalls - of daily living with pervasive adaptive computing.