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  • Microsoft Access 2003 - A Beginners Guide
  • A database manager is a computer program for storing information in an easily retrievable form. It is used mainly to store text and numbers (for example, the Library catalogue, which includes the author, title, class number and accession number for each book). Most modern database managers also allow the storage of other types of information such as dates, hyperlinks, pictures and sounds. As well as being able to store data, a database allows you to select information quickly and easily (for example, a list of the books written by a particular author or those on a certain subject). Finally, it may allow you to produce printed summaries (reports) of the information selected. When setting up your own database, it is important to plan its use in advance. This is particularly important if you are setting one up which will be used by other people. Among the things which you should consider are: • What information you will need to store • What information you want to get out • Who the data is intended for and how other users will use it • Whether you want to restrict access to parts of the data to some users only • Who is allowed to add or change data • If your data refers to actual people, it may need to be registered under the Data Protection Act Although you can change the specifications of your database as you develop it, you will save yourself a lot of work if as much as possible is planned in advance. Microsoft Access is
  • F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange
  • F-Secure® Anti-Virus™ for Microsoft Exchange protects Microsoft Exchange environments from viruses, worms and Trojans by scanning internal, incoming and outgoing messages in real-time. The product scans not only e-mail messages and attachments, but it also stops viruses in documents and notes posted to public folders. Powerful Protection Against E-mail Viruses Microsoft Exchange systems ensure efficient and productive information sharing, while at the same time they create a fertile ground for viruses. This is why virus writers often take advantage of the most commonly used e-mail and groupware systems. As e-mail viruses are able to reach all workstations in a corporate network only in a few minutes, companies without proper virus protection expose themselves to a severe risk of significant productivity and monetary losses as well as to loss of professional reputation when sending virus-infected messages to their customers and business partners. With F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange, you can stop viruses already at the e-mail server, ensuring no viruses are able to enter or leave your corporate network. Simple and Automated Administration F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange is easy to set up and administer even by companies with scarce IT resources. However, it also scales up to the needs of large enterprises by providing the possibility to deploy several virus scanner servers. The solution updates itself automatically without any intervention from the administrator. The administrator can configure and manage the solution either with an easy-to-use local user interface or with F-Secure Policy Manager™ that is included free-of-charge in the solution. F-Secure Policy Manager also
  • A brief MySQL tutorial
  • Creating and Deleting Databases 1) Creating a database mysql> CREATE database 134a; Query OK, 1 row affected (0.00 sec) 2) Deleting a database mysql> DROP atabase 134a; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) Creating a Table 3) After we have created the database we use the USE statement to change the current database; mysql> USE 134a; Database changed 4) Creating a table in the database is achieved with the CREATE table statement mysql> CREATE TABLE president ( -> last_name varchar(15) not null, -> first_name varchar(15) not null, -> state varchar(2) not null, -> city varchar(20) not null, -> birth date not null default '0000-00-00', -> death date null -> ); Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) Download pdf A brief MySQL tutorial
  • Sony Notebook Computer User Guide PCG-C1VE Vaio Manual
  • This manual and the software described herein, in whole or in part, may not be reproduced, translated, or reduced to any machine-readable form without prior written approval. Sony Corporation provides no warranty with regard to this manual, the software, or other information contained herein and hereby expressly disclaims any implied warranties or merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose with regard to this manual, the software or such other information. In no event shall Sony Corporation be liable for any incidental, consequential, or special damages, whether based on tort, contract, or otherwise, arising out of or in connection with this manual, the software, or other information contained herein or to use thereof. Download Sony Notebook Computer User Guide PCG-C1VE Vaio
  • Your First Cup of Web 2.0 - A Quick Look at jQuery, Spring MVC, and XStream/Jettison
  • That's the first thing that popped into my head after learning about jQuery earlier this year. jQuery is a powerful yet unobtrusive JavaScript library with a lousy name. It's concise, very readable syntax has me exciting about writing JavaScript again. It's unobtrusiveness makes it easy to add rich behavior—such as background form submissions—to web applications with very little modification of existing code. Being unobtrusive is particularly important when you are working with a large code base, or where extensive refactoring just isn't going to get funding. My boss is not going to give me 4 weeks to go back and add some visual goodness to an existing site. But I might get 4 hours, and that's where jQuery can help. As a simple example, imagine an automobile search function that returns results based on a vehicle Model. Enter text into the field, click submit, and the results are displayed. The JSP might look like: After the user enters a name and clicks submit, the entire screen turns white while the page refreshes and then the results are displayed. This is not a good user experience. Now, let's use jQuery to improve that experience by refreshing only the part of the page that actually needs to change. The modifications made to the existing page are: 1. Split the search form and search results into 2 separate JSPs so the results can be displayed separately, without having to re-render the search form. 2. Add a placeholder DIV on the search form JSP to hold the search
  • Advanced Lighting Tutorial
  • In this tutorial we delve deep into the Global Illumination and Environment system featured in Turtle 4.1 It takes some time with any rendering software to get to the point where you're confident in setting up a beautiful render. This tutorial will attempt to provide you with lots of shortcuts that can help you get really nice renders in Turtle and lay out a good workflow for lighting many different types of scenes. You'll also find in-depth technical notes on a lot of the components and concepts included in Turtle’s Global Illumination and Environment system. You can work through the examples without reading the technical notes if you wish, but be sure to look at them for reference later if needed. The first example we'll look at is an indoor/studio setup of an espresso cup on a table. Open the demo scene espresso.mb. The model should look pretty rough, we're using Turtle's builtin subdivison surface option for speed. Go ahead and render a frame and you should see a smoother cup, although there's no Global Illumination going on yet so it's pretty black. Download pdf Advanced Lighting Tutorial
  • How to Use the New Internet for Business Development
  • Ten years ago, many managers of small professional practices were wondering if they needed their own company website. Many still get by without one today, but most consider a website essential for practice development. Doubts about whether to have a website seem quaint now. Ten years from now, the issue of whether to engage in the “Web 2.0 conversation” will seem quaint. How the Web Was Won Web 2.0 refers to the new version of the World Wide Web, which is more collaborative and “user-generated” than the previous version. In the early days of the Web, content flowed mainly one way: from websites to users. Web 2.0, also called the social Web, enables users—people with no web programming skills, HTML knowledge, or website development experience—to create content and form communities of content creators. In fact, Time magazine named such users (“You”) its Person of the Year in 2006. Instead of flowing one way, online content now flows every which way and back again—it’s a conversation. Web 2.0 marketing tools include social networking sites (like Facebook and LinkedIn), which let you build your personal, professional, or company profile online, and connect with other site members to build relationships, share referrals, educate each other, and form virtual communities. Social media sites make it easy for anyone to publish original content, including news (Newsvine), information (Wikipedia), photos (Flickr), videos (YouTube), and user-generated content of all kinds on blogs (Blogger, WordPress), micro-blogs (Twitter), specialized wikis (Wikispaces, PBwiki, Google Sites), and forums (Google Groups). All of the above
  • Dealing with Facebook Phenomenon Effectively
  • The tone of recent news stories about the dangers of Facebook has been quite hysterical and many IT directors can be forgiven for feeling under threat from the phenomenon. But is a blanket ban for the site the best approach or merely a knee-jerk reaction, perhaps a more tailored approach with network management tools is appropriate? Dangers come in threes In some regards, IT directors are right to be anxious. Facebook usage is horribly addictive and many users admit to spending at least two hours a day on the site during working hours. Not only is this a massive drain on productivity, it also hits company resources hard and opens up some significant security threats to boot. Estimates from some organisations are quite alarming; a figure of £130m per day in lost productivity for UK businesses has been widely referenced and this is probably the key reason why 50% of employers have now banned the site completely. 192.com, the search engine, decided to prohibit the site completely after it was discovered that add-on applications used by ‘Facebookers’ were absorbing 40% of the company’s available internet connection. Hackers have of course cottoned onto the infiltration opportunities that Facebook presents and the coming months will doubtless see an increasing number of security scares. Personal security is also a potential minefield as many users are blithely sharing personal information on Facebook which could fuel identity theft and phishing attacks. News now comes that Facebook has agreed a deal to make users’ names and photos available on
  • Setting Options and Customising Microsoft Excel 2002
  • Like all Microsoft Office products, Excel allows you to customise various settings to suit your own requirements. Whereas Microsoft Word has a default template called normal.dot, Excel has a special file called Excel.xlb in which your settings are stored. Note that not all settings are stored here, however - for example, each file has its own colour palette. Perhaps the most useful customisation centres around the toolbars and menus. You can decide which toolbars to display (and where you would like them positioned on the screen). If you want to, you can remove, add or rearrange the buttons on a toolbar (or the commands in a menu). You can even create your own toolbars and menus, adding either built-in commands or your own (using macros - see Writing Macros in Microsoft Excel 2003 for further information). Another common area of customisation concerns charts. You can create your own chart types and change the palette of colours used on charts. Defining your own types lets you apply a given layout to a set of charts - eg for a particular publication or thesis. While on the subject of colours, you can also modify the default colour palette used for fonts and filling cells. A further aspect of customisation centres around customised lists. A few lists are built into the system (eg the days of the week and months of the year) but you can create your own. These can then be used to fill further cells or to sort data in a particular order.
  • From Programming Language Design to Computer Construction
  • Niklaus Wirth of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology {ETH] waspresented the 1984 ACM A. M. Ihring Award at the Association's Annual Conference in San Francisco in October in recognition of his outstanding work in developing a sequence of innovative computer languages: Euler' ALGOL-W, Modula, and Pascal. Pascal, in particular, has become significant pedagogically and has established a foundation for future research in the areas of computer language, systems, and architecture. The hallmarks of a Wirth language are its simplicity, economy of design, and high-quality engineering, which result in a language whose notation appears to be a natural extension of algorithmic thinking rather than an extraneous formalism. Wirth's ability in language design is complemented by a masterful writing ability. In the April 1971 issue of Communications of the ACM, Wirth published a seminal paper on Structured Programming {"Program Develop- ment by Stepwise Refinement"] that recommended top-down structuring of programs {i.e., successively refining program stubs until the program is fully elaborated]. The resulting elegant and powerful method of exposition remains interesting reading today even after the furor over Structured Programming has subsided. 1lvo later papers, "Toward a Discipline of Real-Time Programming" and "What Can We Do About the Unnecessary Diversity of Notation" {published in CACM in August and November 1974, respectively], speak to Wirth's consistent and dedicated search for an adequate language formalism. The Taring Award, the Association's highest recognition of technical contributions to the computing community, honors Alan M. Taring, the English mathematician who defined the computer prototype Taring machine and helped