The perfect way to Celebrate the Power of Java, Hello World(s): From Code to Culture is a richly-illustrated commemorative book that will be available in the fall of 2005. This unique coffee table... This description may be from another edition of this product.
Great Intro to Java in a bookshelf that is too technical...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
I was looking for an intro to Java - what is it all about, why does it work everywhere but all of the books I scanned were very specialized programming books - seems odd that this is the only intro book but it is! Beautiful book with great pictures and history - quick read but you will understand what why it is on everything from phones to mainframe computers. cheers, lee
Nice lightweight book on Java's progress 1995-2005
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
This is a nicely produced coffeetable book that sets out the ten years of Java from a concept of how household devices might be controlled to where it is today - such as on a whole lot of cellphones for example. The book is not a technical one. Instead it is a celebration of the language with large color photos, good graphics, and the tale of how Java happened. There are the stories of the "Oak" and "Green" days, how the basic premise of Java as a language for controlling consumer devices had to be scrapped and started over, and then how the Internet finally gave the language that "big break" and the purpose it had been looking for. The book takes you to the splitting of Java into three targeted platforms, and to where we are today, which is Java Everywhere: Phones, smart cards, PC's, the Internet. There are also lots of pretty interesting tidbits of information. Lots of it I knew, but there are quite a few odds and ends I did not know. For example, this book tells you what names for the language preceded Java, and why Java was ultimately the name that stuck. This being a book by Sun intended to celebrate Java's tenth birthday, there's not much in here about what bothers people about the language. For example, don't expect discussions on the problems caused by the language carrying its Virtual Machine wherever it goes, and that Java's "write once run everywhere" GUI's can often turn into "write once, debug everywhere" GUI's. However, there's no denying that this language has been and can be downright fun to use - no PR-based coffeetable book could invent that fact out of thin air. Also, it is much easier to use than C++ even if they are suited for different types of tasks. At any rate, reading this book has resulted in some serious flashbacks for me anyway, since I've been using the language from the beginning. This is a pretty light but interesting book that will get you remembering and thinking about Java's progress over the years, which is probably the reason Sun produced it in the first place.
a superficial book, best suited for the coffeetable
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Scary that a ten year anniversary of Java is already upon us. To celebrate, Sun put forth this book, which walks us through the short and tumultuous history. It describes how Java grew from ideas in the early 90s, which were inspired by Sun's longstanding slogan, "the network is the computer". And which predates the Web. Indeed, the book shows at a nontechnical level how Java has largely delivered on this promise. More so than any other alternative. However, the book is rather sparse on technical details. Or even about the personalities like Joy and Gosling. It is a coffeetable book. Rendered somewhat bland because Sun itself put it out. Sure, the text has all sorts of free flowing and casual phrases. But there is very little of substantive details. Not just about the technical aspects. What we still need is a book that goes into far more detail about how we went from Oak to Java. It need not necessarily have to have a lot of programming level information. But it should also give insight into the key players. Along with commentary on how Java has actually and ironically delivered little in significant tangible revenue to Sun. Though, to be sure, it has helped give Sun immense mindshare in the programming crowd. That book would need to be written by someone independent of Sun.
ThriftBooks sells millions of used books at the lowest
everyday prices. We personally assess every book's quality and offer rare, out-of-print treasures. We
deliver the joy of reading in recyclable packaging with free standard shipping on US orders over $15.
ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less.