Safari Gets Bigger and Better -- There are now more than 2,000 books from the industry's leading technical publishers available on Safari Bookshelf. As the library grows, so does its functionality: searches are powerfully precise and as broad or specific as you wish; and now, with a Safari Max subscription, you can download chapters to read offline. Safari will help you save time, reduce errors, keep current, and save more money than ever with up to 35% off print copies of your favorite books. If you haven't
yet gone on Safari, try a free trial subscription.
Walking Through an RSS 1.0 Document -- RSS (Rich Site Summary) is a method of describing web content that is available for syndication. Find out what an actual RSS document looks like in Chapter 6 of Content Syndication with RSS. And get a free trial to read this and four other O'Reilly books on Safari.
Gastronomy for Geeks -- Pizza, Twinkies, and Jolt are geek haute
cuisine for a stereotypical few. Many of you know the difference between au
jus and baba ghanoush, and that Thai shish kabob isn't called sauté.
So, you Geek Gourmets, come share your favorite recipes, and see what your peers are
cooking.
The Software Paradigm Shift -- Tim O'Reilly says the operating system no longer
matters. Applications now live above the level of a single device or OS.
"We're at the end of the personal-computing era. We're at the beginning of
something profoundly different." Listen in on this IT Conversations
interview, and find other interviews with Tim at tim.oreilly.com.
A PHP Web Services Client -- Web services promise to make your life easier as more companies are beginning to allow access to their data through Web services APIs. Learn how to write a PHP application to Amazon's Web services API from Adam Trachtenberg, coauthor of PHP Cookbook.
Introduction to Web Services -- Web services are all about enabling computers to
communicate with each other, opening up services and data. Built on open
standards, Web services offer convenient ways to
open up the functionality of your applications to other applications.
Chapter 1 of Programming Web Services with Perl provides a thorough
introduction--read it before you start programming Web services. Get
a free trial to read this and four other O'Reilly books on Safari.
Amazon Hacks is a collection of real-world tips, tricks, and full-scale solutions to practical uses of Amazon.com and the Amazon Web Services API. If you have an Amazon hack you'd like to contribute, visit hacks.oreilly.com.
Sift, Stir, Code: O'Reilly
Cookbooks -- Looking for the right ingredients to solve a programming
problem? Look no further than O'Reilly Cookbooks. Each cookbook contains
hundreds of programming recipes presented in a special
Problem/Solution/Discussion format, and includes hundreds of scripts,
programs, and command sequences you can use to solve specific dilemmas. Get
your daily recipes and view our complete list of Programming Cookbooks for
Geeks.
Five
Tips for .NET Programming in Perl -- Don't get tripped up making
your Perl SOAP applications work with .NET services. Here are some of the
most common traps for Perl developers, enumerated by Randy J. Ray, coauthor
of Programming Web
Services with Perl.