Tag Archives: microsoft
SharePoint 2010 Development
SharePoint 2010 Development with Visual Studio 2010, Eric Carter, Addison-Wesley, 2011 It’s remarkable how much you can develop without doing any traditional coding. Dialogs allow you to point and click it all together, as long as you like the available … Continue reading
Office 2011 for Macintosh
Office 2011 for Macintosh The Missing Manual, Chris Grover, – 2011 A User guide. 700 pages.
Small Business Server 2008 (MCTS Exam 70-653)
MCTS Self -paced Training Kit (Exam 70-653) – Configuring Windows Small Business Server 2008, Beatrice Mulzer, – 2010 For the administrator of a Microsoft server. If you want to get certified, this book will help. 400 pages with disc.
Office for Mac
Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 By Spivey, Dwight (- 2011) A user guide.
Windows Application Development (MCTS Exam 70-511)
MCTS Self-paced Training Kit (Exam 70-511) Windows Application Development With Microsoft .net Framework 4 By Stoecker, Matthew A. (- 2011) If you want to get certified this will help.
Microsoft SQL Server
Inside Microsoft SQL Server 2008 T-SQL Programming, Itzik Ben-Gan, Microsoft Press, 2010 This book for database programmers covers some advanced topics. 800 pages.
Professional Silverlight
Professional Silverlight 4, Jason Beres, 2010 For programmers who are designing a Rich Internet Application (RIA) on Microsoft Windows. Contains lots of example code. 800 pages.
Silverlight 4 in Action
Silverlight 4 in Action Silverlight 4, MVVM, and WCF RAI Services, Pete Brown, (- 2010) 750 pages.
Professional Windows Phone 7
Professional Windows Phone 7 Application Development Building Applications and Games Using Visual Studio, Silverlight, and XNA, Nick Randolph, 2010 This book for programmers is well written, looks useful, and has lots of example code in C#. 550 pages.
Professional F#
Professional F# 2.0, Ted Neward, 2011 F# is a high level language that makes good use of multicore processors, not requiring the programmer to put effort into synchronization. I would like to see benchmarks, because there must be considerable overhead. … Continue reading
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