Tag Archives: Book Review

Book Review: Drupal Development Tricks for Designers by Dani Nordin

Learning Drupal is one of my main technology learning goals for 2012, so I was interested in reading Drupal Development Tricks for Designers by Dani Nordin. While I am not a designer, I was interested in ready a Drupal book directed at the non-coding masses since I am learning Drupal. The first thing to get out is that this book isn’t about design but rather walks designers how they can create a development environment for their Drupal projects. I am a believer in self sufficiency on tech projects so I am down with the aim of this book and think Nordin really hits the mark with this book.

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Book Review: SharePoint 2010: Creating and Implementing Real World Projects (Microsoft Press)

I am a sucker for practical technology books especially about Microsoft SharePoint so Microsoft SharePoint 2010: Creating and Implementing Real World Projects hits my sweet spot with its well paced projects that take readers through all the stages to create and implement a SharePoint project using out of the box features. It puts me in my mind of the excellent SharePoint 2010 for Project Management book by Dux Raymond Sy.

The projects based approach to this book is a real selling point especially since you don’t even need to be a fully trained SharePoint developer/administrator in order to follow them and the create the projects. The book’s projects run the gamut from a project management solution, a basic FAQ solution, to a resource scheduling solution. Project complexity grows as the book progresses but each project sticks to the format of Identifying the Business Problems; Gathering Information; Designing the Solution; Building the Solution; and Managing the Solution.

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Book Review: Professional WordPress by Hal Stern, David Damstra, and Brad Wilson

Like many people, I’ve had an ongoing love/hate relationship with WordPress through the course of running my personal blog and some freelance assignments so I am always open to learning more about the platform. I recently read Professional WordPress by Hal Stern, David Damstra, and Brad Wilson from Wiley Publishing, which unlike many other WordPress books focuses on the platform’s backend and tackles the ins and outs of WordPress in the enterprise. Even having some experience installing WordPress myself, I really didn’t know much about its backend and this book really filled in some gaps in my learning.

While there is not much of anything new to learn in the first two chapters, the book really hits its stride when it takes the reader through the WordPress Core and Loop. Both of these topics might be a bit black box to some WordPress users especially if they’ve never had the opportunity to install and tune the product in the wild.

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Book Review: MOS 2010 Study Guide for Microsoft Word

After having a great experience reading the MOS 2010 Study Guide for Microsoft Office SharePoint, my next read was the MOS 2010 Study Guide for Word. Microsoft Word has always been a bread and butter application for me as both a technical writer and freelance writer. Things have been a bit slow lately, so I am taking advantage of the time to shore up some old skills and learn new ones.

The book’s tendency to overlap screen captures became a bit annoying after the first 100 pages. To a novice Word 2010 user, this space saving move could lead to a minor bit of confusion. Take the screen captures on page 143 of 317 (iBook edition) which borders on abstract art not clear and concise communications. While I am on the subject of screen shots, fading out the bottom and right sides of them while certainly a special effect made it almost look like a rendering issue on the screen. There were also a few places in the text where the pagination would cut into the middle of a procedure that was also a bit disappointing considering the state of epublishing tools today. These lapses in production detracted from the overall writing of the manuscript and exercises.

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Book Review: Technical Writing Management: A Practical Guide by Steven Schwarzman

The longer I spend as a technical writer, the more I become discriminate about the technical writing books and publications I read. I stopped taking the academics in technical writing seriously a long time ago and made every effort to align myself and my documentation to the business — the people that pay my check — versus the theories of some professor who faces everyday in the safe predictable confines of the classroom. This means, I am very happy after reading Technical Writing Management: A Practical Guide by Steven A. Schwarzman.  He writes this book from practical experience in a tone that should resonate with both long time technical writers and those still coming up through the ranks.

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