Votes utiles reçus relativement à des chroniques et des listes:
100% (1 sur 1)
Surnom : grhowes
Emplacement: Nashua, NH
Dans mes propres mots:
Glenn Howes is a jack of all trades, master of one. I am an excellent Macintosh and iPhone programmer. I am the first of 10 children; each smarter than the last, if we line up in the correct order. My motto ought to be: 'Anything you can't do within 3 feet of a computer isn't worth doing.' I'm a technogeek and proud of it.
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Évaluations
Classement de l'évaluateur: 29,598 - Total des votes utiles : 1 sur 1
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This is one of the most helpful computer books I have ever read. I not only learned from the numerous examples, I was inspired by their creativity to create content of which I'm proud, and to go from making a me-too product to something people will talk about. It is truly amazing what the unpublicized, interactive capabilities of QuickTime allow you to make. I would warn anyone buying this book, use LiveStage Pro on a Mac as nature intended it; the Windows version is quite buggy and more than a little clunky.
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As someone who can "sort of" play the keyboard, I really appreciate this songbook. Most of the songs are quite simple to play, yet they are also quite beautiful. Of the dozen or so sheet music books I own, this is my favorite. I amaze myself when I can sit down to play Where do I Begin and actually make lovely sounds with my amateur fingers. I once watched a documentary on film scoring which pointed out the difference between movie music and TV music. TV theme music has to be frentic and grab your attention before you change the channel, the composer of movie music has the luxury of knowing his audience isn't going anywhere. Thus, movie music is often simple and emotional… Lire la suite
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I've been meaning to learn Objective C, Interface Builder and Project Builder for years. From back in the days of Rhapsody, and before when I'd bought books on NextStep programming. Always intended to do so, that is, until I received this book at Apple's World Wide Developer's Conference. And now after typing my way through the book's source code, I'm comfortable with Objective C's oddball syntax, understand how to wire up an application in Interface Builder and have confidence I'll soon be making quality Cocoa applications of my own. I've already started writing a freedb client. Obviously, it would be nice for me if the book explored network programming or the IOKit, but it concentrated… Lire la suite
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