O'Reilly Media, Inc. (August 5, 2008)
PDF | 476 pages | English | 6.5mb(rar)
Programming .NET 3.5/by Jesse Liberty (Author), Alex Horovitz (Author)
Description
.NET 3.5 will help you create better Windows applications, build Web Services that are more powerful, implement new Workflow projects and dramatically enhance the user's experience. But it does so with what appears to be a collection of disparate technologies. In Programming .NET 3.5, bestselling author Jesse Liberty and industry expert Alex Horovitz uncover the common threads that unite the .NET 3.5 technologies, so you can benefit from the best practices and architectural patterns baked into this newest generation of Microsoft frameworks.

Pogue Press; 2 edition (August 20, 2008)
PDF | 376 pages | English | 5.6mb(rar)
iPhone The Missing Manual: Covers the iPhone 3G/by David Pogue (Author)
Description
The new iPhone 3G is here, and New York Times tech columnist David Pogue is on top of it with a thoroughly updated edition of iPhone: The Missing Manual. With its faster downloads, touch-screen iPod, and best-ever mobile Web browser, the new affordable iPhone is packed with possibilities. But without an objective guide like this one, you'll never unlock all it can do for you. In this new edition, there are new chapters on the App Store, with special troubleshooting and sycning issues with iTunes; Apple's new MobileMe service, and what it means to the iPhone; and Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync compatibility.


Marketing Management (12th Edition)
PDF | English | 813 Pages | 93 MB


Hacking the PSP ( Play Station Portable )
PDF | English | 339 Pages | 8 MB


Circuit Cellar #218 - September 2008
PDF | English | 100 pages | 13 Mb
Offers
hands-on applications and solutions for embedded-control designers.So
who is likely to enjoy this magazine? Serious electronics hobbyists,
for sure, garage robot-builders and gadgeteers, engineering students at
any level (grade school to grad school), and the people who teach those
students - or at least try to keep up. It's probably good for
consultants who do electronic prototypes and one-offs, where fast
turnaround and proof of principle matters more than volume production
or FAA certification. And I bet it's good for any hardware engineer who
wants to know more about software, or vice versa. It's for anyone who
thinks embedded system development is just plain fun, if you do it
right.


PC Magazine September 2008
PDF | English | 108 pages | 52.1 MB
