Category: Book recommendation


HUBBLE Site Offers Two Free PDF Books

Books

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 UPDATE January 21, 2013 :  For those with an iPad the iBook versions are for you.  For everyone else, download the PDF (Portable Document Format) version and view it on your computer, or tablet.  - Robert 

Soar through the universe with the Hubble Space Telescope, exploring some of its most significant discoveries – from dark energy to colliding galaxies. Decend to Earth, where Hubble’s successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, readies for the future of astronomy. Image galleries, video, and interactives bring home the telescopes’ science and engineering in this pair of free books available through the iBooks® app on the iPad.

CLICK HERE to get these iBooks and PDF’s.

Thanks to Verna G. for this link.

Our Choice


The Next Generation of Digital Books

Our Choice will change the way we read books. And quite possibly change the world. In this interactive app, Al Gore surveys the causes of global warming and presents groundbreaking insights and solutions already under study and underway that can help stop the unfolding disaster of global warming. Our Choice melds the vice president’s narrative with photography, interactive graphics, animations, and more than an hour of engrossing documentary footage. A new, groundbreaking multi-touch interface allows you to experience that content seamlessly. Pick up and explore anything you see in the book; zoom out to the visual table of contents and quickly browse though the chapters; reach in and explore data-rich interactive graphics.

CLICK HERE to visit the source web site and take a Guided Tour of Our Choice.

CLICK HERE for the iTunes Preview page.

CLICK Here if the embedded video is not visible above.

Thanks to Carol W. for the link


Vintage Science Fiction Magazine Covers

For those who have been fans of Science Fiction for years, here is Glenn Harris and his collection of vintage SF magazine covers.

Click here to visit Vintage SF Magazine Covers

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And for those who want new works to enjoy—there is SffMeta, a meta-review site for science fiction and fantasy books. I looked up my old favorites and read reviews of the books I had missed by the same author.

Looking for summer reading suggestions? Old Man’s War by John Scalzi, The Shadow of the Wind, How Starbucks Saved My Life. and my personal favorite Truth Machine by James Halperin.


Click here to visit the SffMeta website.



Let me direct your attention to the newest title from O’Reilly Publishing: Photoshop CS5 • The Missing Manual by Lesa Snider.

I had the pleasure of serving as a technical reviewer on this title and recommend it to all who want Photoshop’s features revealed with a real world “show me how” approach. Very readable. Comprehensive.

-Robert Barnes

Here is a portion of the book’s Foreword by David Pogue from the New York Times.

“In the short but crowded history of consumer technology, only two products ever became so common, influential, and powerful that their names become verbs.

Google is one.

Photoshop is the other.

(“Did you Google that guy who asked you out?” “Yeah—he’s crazy. He Photoshopped his last girlfriend out of all his pictures!”)

It’s safe to say that these days, not a single photograph gets published, in print or online, without having been processed in Photoshop first. It’s usually perfectly innocent stuff: a little color adjustment, contrast boosting, or cropping.

But not always. Sometimes, the editing actually changes the photo so that it no longer represents the original, and all kinds of ethical questions arise. Remember when TV Guide Photoshopped Oprah’s head onto Ann-Margaret’s body?

When Time magazine darkened O.J. Simpson’s skin to make him look more menacing on the cover? Or when National Geographic moved two of the pyramids closer together to improve the composition?
Well, you get the point: Photoshop is magic. Thanks to Photoshop, photography is no longer a reliable record of reality.

And now, all that magic is in your hands. Use it wisely.
There’s only one problem: Photoshop is a monster. It’s huge. Just opening it is like watching a slumbering beast heave into consciousness. Dudes: Photoshop CS5 has over 500 menu commands.

In short, installing Photoshop is like being told that you’ve just won a 747 jumbo jet. You sit down in the cockpit and survey the endless panels of controls and switches.
Now what?
You don’t even get a printed manual anymore.”

And that is where this new book comes in.

-rb

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