O Reilly Programming Books Torrent
Here’s a list of books published or “in-progress” by O’Reilly Media which are free to read online or download legally. All of these books are hosted on websites that belong to the authors or O’Reilly Media. Please note that books listed here are free at the time of posting and each of them has it’s own terms, conditions and licenses. Click on book covers to access them.
O'Reilly – Actionscript for Flash MX The Definitive Guide 2n.pdf. O'Reilly – Active Directory 2nd Edition.chm. O'Reilly – Active Directory Cookbook for Windows Server 2003.chm. O'Reilly – Advanced Perl Programming.pdf. O'Reilly – Advanced Python Programming.pdf. O'Reilly – Amazon Hacks.chm.
They may be available online or downloaded in pdf, epub, mobi and daisy formats.
O'reilly Programming Books
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Related reddits. I think they're trying to encourage use of the CC0 tool instead, which lets you remove copyright from your own work without their involvement. The only drawback is that CC0 takes effect immediately, and can't be trivially scheduled in the future (but I'm sure if you hired a lawyer, you could find a way to do so). The founder's copyright system is a relatively complicated legal hack compared to CC0: it requires the direct involvement of Creative Commons. CC has been reluctant to become directly involved in that fashion in the past; their licenses all bear prominent disclaimers and they explicitly say they are not a law firm. Perhaps they were concerned that a founder's copyright could create an attorney-client relationship. EDIT: is a rather enlightening mailing list post.
A long, long, long, long time ago O'Reilly books used to be EXCELLENT. You had authors who KNEW the subject VERY WELL, who were also good at explaining the subject and in a brief format. Those days are long gone. Most programming text books suck these days. The authors do not even bother to paste their code into a compiler to make sure it will even compile, let alone work. You either get massive code samples, or incomplete ones.
You really need both. Short quotes in the explanatory text, with full functioning files in the back in case you can't guess some small forgotten detail. Many text books just rehash the documentation or lazily assume you just want the book as a guide to it. No, I want something I can't get from free internet tutorials or stackoverflow.
I want things explained, practical things and I want them explained clearly, by someone who knows how to write. Is that really it? I can't imagine a person who writes for a living (doing books regularly) would even consider doing them for less than $30-40k MINIMUM.especially when tech books are often 400+ pages, are very exacting (can't be padded as easily as fiction) and need others to verify/proof the author's work in a meticulous fashion. Then again, you could be 100% right.I just figured published authors actually got compensated well. The real financial benefits lie in follow up consulting. Please explain, if you don't mind.