![]() Sony CDX-GT630UI MP3/WMA/AAC Compliant CD Receiver with iPod Direct Control via USB $159.95 I Purchased This Head unit On 11/19/09 and i just recieved it today on 11/24/09. Besides the shipping taking forever i Bought the Head unit from amazon, and the Wiring Harness & Amp Integration Harness [...] which came to a total cost for everything at about $135. For the Price it is a great head unit! as for some of the reviews i have read before deciding to purchase this one, Ill tell you something about this product that i could not find in the reviews. It does have 3x Preouts in the back of the head unit. One for front,rear,and subwoofer speakers. It was also very easy to hook up it took all of 15 mins for me to take out my factory stereo and apply the wiring harness to finish the installation. The wiring harness from crutchfield made everything easier by 90% and with the Amp Integration Wiring Harness I didnt have to splice any wires or run any either. It made Bypassing my Factory amplifier very easy! The USB port functions very easily and it connects very fast. And if you pull it out at the middle of a song, Dont worry! It picks up right where you left off. To sum it all up I would recommend this head unit to anyone its a great buy for the price and quality! ![]() The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui $16.99 In this savage and witty parable written in exile in 1941, Brecht recasts the rise of Hitler as a small-time Chicago gangster's takeover of the city's greengrocery trade. This prizewinning translation by Ralph Manheim skilfully captures the wide range of parody and pastiche in the original - from Richard III to Al Capone, from Mark Antony to Faust - without diminishing the horror of the real-life Nazi prototypes. ![]() Designing Interfaces $49.95 I had to get this book for one of my classes and I will admit it is not a book for experts in the field of "Designing Interfaces", but it's great for beginners and good for anyone less than an expert but more than a beginner. Tidwell brings design patterns you see daily on the web and in programs like Microsoft Word to your attention and then gives them a name, tells you how to use it, when to use it, and why to and not to use it. I liked the organization of the information, and although the font is a little tough to read with the san serif font used but it's not a big enough problem to keep me from reading it. I feel that in the end the book gave what her description promised, It's gonna go next to Steve Kuges book "Don't Make Me Think" and Tuftes book "Visual Explinations" on my book shelf. ![]() jQuery UI 1.7: The User Interface Library for jQuery $44.99 This weekend, I finished reading jQuery UI 1.7 [The User Interface Library For jQuery] by Dan Wellman (released by PACKT Publishing). It's a follow-up to his jQuery UI 1.6 book, which I reviewed in early 2009. With a technology that is evolving as fast as jQuery, it's important that the documentation keep up such that we may know how to best leverage the tools that we have available; Dan's latest book, jQuery UI 1.7, does just that - bringing us completely up-to-speed with all aspects of the jQuery UI library. One thing that I was thrilled to see when reading this book was that after a brief introduction to jQuery and jQuery UI, Dan dives directly into the jQuery UI CSS framework. With the 1.7 release of jQuery UI, the library has become completely standardized in the way that the markup and CSS classes are applied to the library widgets. Not only does this make it easy to uniformly skin the widgets (via tools like ThemeRoller), it provides a good structure for anyone hoping to create their own custom user interface widgets. Dan covered the CSS framework in chapter 2, but I was very happy to find the CSS framework being brought up as a consistent theme throughout the book; each widget-based chapter takes time to examine the programmatically-generated HTML of each widget instance as well as how the phenotype of each widget might be overridden with some simple CSS rules. Whether through the configuration options or through customized CSS, Dan really does a great job of painting a picture of flexibility; as with any library, it's important to not feel like you've locked yourself into a corner, and Dan takes great care to drive home the point that jQuery UI is empowering, not constraining. The CSS exploration in this book was very good and it made me greedy; I wanted to see more. Particularly, I would have loved to have seen a chapter dedicated to the concept of authoring your own jQuery UI widgets. Throughout the book, Dan touches on this concept, showing us were we might use a ui-widget-header or ui-widget-content class to theme our own markup, but authoring as a topic was never really fleshed out. Of course, I have a suspicion that an exploration in authoring widgets would fill another book, not just another chapter (hint hint ;)). Beyond the CSS framework and all that it entails (which is something that I was particular interested in), the book provides exhaustive documentation of how the UI widgets and UI behaviors work. Starting each widget with the out-of-the-box default configuration, Dan discusses what each option, callback, and event binding does and how we can leverage them to enhance the user experience. When it comes to the UI behaviors (drag, drop, resize, select, sort), which are by nature less tangible, Dan takes extra care to step through examples with increasing complexity, describing real-world scenarios in which the various behaviors might be used (ex. maze game, task list, image viewer, Google-style portal). In addition to the focused explanation of each widget and behavior, Dan also demonstrates the high-intercompatability of the various library components. Whether it's nesting tabbed interfaces within accordions, accordion interfaces within modal windows, date pickers as modal prompts, or applying sortability behaviors to tabbed interfaces, I was very happy to see that the underlying structure of the jQuery UI library was so well thought out that nesting one widget within another causes no complications. Overall, jQuery UI 1.7 [The User Interface Library For jQuery] is a very thorough book and definitely a solid resource for anyone looking to become familiar with the ins and outs of the library. Dan Wellman has a clear and easy-to-follow writing style and lays out his examples with increasing complexity in a way that everyone can understand. He appears to have a good grasp on the underlying CSS framework, and in fact, this is a topic on which I'd like to see him write a lot more. |
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