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On the reading table (mid Feb 2009)

February 20th, 2009

I usually like to have five or six books on the go. Over the past few days, I have been shuffling between the following three books.

book_presentzen

Presentation Zen: Simple Ideas on Presentation Design and Delivery by Garr Reynolds. I found this one in my college library’s new collection shelf. This book provides insight and inspiration for creating a new style of presentations characterized by simplicity, beauty, and visually engaging imagery. The presentation style advocated in this book is somewhat similar to the approach that I have adopted in my public academic presentations over the past two years. If you are stuck in a PowerPoint rut, this book might help you.

 

 

 

book_predstate

The Predator State: How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market and Why Liberals Should Too by James Galbraith. The idea of a conservative predator state — that the operations of the state are used principally to further the profits of certain client corporations — certainly seems applicable to the almost 40 years of rule by my province’s (Alberta) governing party.

Galbraith argues that modern conservative governments are not interested in reducing the government and but are in fact interested in using the institutions of government for private benefit, to place them in the control of their friends and to put them to the use of their clients. That is, the purpose of government for modern conservatives is to divert funds from the public sector to the private sector.

 

 

 book_rebelsell

The Rebel Sell: How the Counterculture Became Consume Culture by Joseph Heath and Andrew Potter. I decided to buy this book after hearing the two authors on a TVO podcast back in May 2007, and I thought at the time that it was a brilliant line of reasoning.

Their argument is that counter-culture consumption does not undermine competitive consumptionbut is in fact the leading cause of  it. As a result, mainy left-leaning political/cultural critiques have misdiagnosed the problems in western societies. These critiques, the authors argue, have focused on identifying and undermining an supposed repressive mass society oriented around consumption, when in fact the counter-culture actually feeds competitive consumption. As such, competitive consumerism is actually the outcome of a struggle by individuals to maintain or increase status. As they say, the problem isn’t someone trying to keep up with the Jones, but the Jones who started the consuming one-upmanship.

Books

March 5th, 2007

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Just in time for my birthday, I’ve received my first copies of my book, Core Internet Application Development with ASP.NET 2.0, published by Prentice Hall. After all the unrelenting work of writing the book from Oct-05 to Aug-06, and the slower and time-consuming process of editing it from Sep-06 to Dec-06, it was somewhat unreal to actually see the finished product in my hands. It was a great moment, and yet I felt somewhat distant from it all.

My department chair Bill Paterson and the Pearson Ed book rep Shannon Bailey arranged a nice reception at the College for the book, with a cake and free copies of the book for my department colleagues. Thanks you two!

ASP.NET, Books, Writing

Core ASP.NET Book Site Released

February 7th, 2007

I am pleased to announce the grand opening of the web site for my upcoming book, Core Internet Application Development with ASP.NET 2.0. This book is being published by Prentice Hall and will be available in stores by late February or early March. Click here to visit this site.

Books