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Linux Journal March 2000 Ben Crowder |
Book Review Using Caldera OpenLinux, Special Edition by Allan Smart, Erik Ratcliffe, Tim Bird, David Bandel  |
Linux Journal March 2000 Paul Almquist |
Book Review Linux System Administration by M. Carling, Stephen Degler, James T. Dennis  |
Linux Journal March 2000 Marjorie Richardson |
Book Review Learning Debian GNU/Linux by Bill McCarty  |
Linux Journal March 2000 Ben Crowder |
Book Review UNIX Shells by Example by Ellie Quigley  |
Fast Company March 2000 Jill Rosenfeld |
Information as if Understanding Mattered Richard Saul Wurman and 12 information architects spent one year and $1 million to produce a book that creates useful information on everything from crime and politics to business and the Net. The real lesson: Design forms understanding.  |
Fast Company March 2000 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Clued In? Sign On! The interconnection of hundreds of millions of people via the Web doesn't represent just another sales channel or merely another opportunity to do the same work faster. It offers the potential to reframe some fundamental questions about business.  |
Fast Company March 2000 Scott Kirsner |
How to Find Your Future "Your biggest competitor is your own view of the future," argues one of two new books, both devoted to helping business leaders build companies and design lives that reflect the confusing realities of the new economy.  |
Fast Company December 1999 Polly LaBarre |
So Cool, So Digital, So Miserable Two new books offer a provocative critique of the most powerful forces in work and life today: digital technology and our branded existence. Are you ready to embrace a return to authenticity?  |
Mother Jones August 1999 |
Media Jones Hollywood's finest arms bazaars; Salman Rushdie rocks ('n' rolls); book, music, and film reviews  |
Inc. September 1999 Seglin, Jeffrey L. |
Take This Job and Love it Reviews of eight business books, including three books from CEOs on the angst and joys of building a company, three books on open-book management, and two books that look beyond the millennium.  |
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