Re: Computer science textbooks

  • From: "Littlefield, Tyler" <tyler@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 21 May 2011 16:16:53 -0600

a monkey can memoryze language constructs, a real programmer knows why things work and happen the way they do. There's a difference in knowing a language, and knowing a language.

On 5/21/2011 3:43 PM, Katherine Moss wrote:
But then is it a requirement to know the theoretical side of things just to 
learn to program in X Languages?

-----Original Message-----
From: programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
[mailto:programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of David Tseng
Sent: Saturday, May 21, 2011 5:42 PM
To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Computer science textbooks

Right, I'm definitely after the theoretical side of things more so than the 
canned set of teach yourself x language type of books.

On 5/21/11, Katherine Moss<Katherine.Moss@xxxxxxxxxx>  wrote:
It also depends upon what you're doing though too.  I have tons of
resources on the C# programming language, but most of the visuals are
just to demonstrate Visual Studio.

-----Original Message-----
From: programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of David
Tseng
Sent: Saturday, May 21, 2011 3:34 PM
To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Computer science textbooks

Yeah...I love the e-text route (amazing what 24x7 offers as they have
books from quite a few publishers like MIT Press, Rocks, Microsoft Press, etc.).
Bookshare's one that also has some offerings.

However, with all that said, the diagram issue is still what I'm
finding lacking without either going the human paid reader/translater
strategy or getting something from RFB&D.

When you're talking about highly technical algorithms or processes,
the visual aid's are worth trying to understand rather than piecing
things together from the main textual narrative of the text.  Also, if
you start getting into any sophisticated mathematical notation, you
lose all of that in translation.

I guess I could run everything through infty reader, but hoped that
there would be some other creative ways people have tackled this issue.

On 5/21/11, Ken Perry<whistler@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>  wrote:
Another one that I learned all my linux stuff from back in the 90's
is still around.  It is books written for computer programmers by
computer programmers.

http://www.wrox.com

There is a lot of other places but that is the one off the top of my head.

Ken

-----Original Message-----
From: programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Florian
Beijers
Sent: Saturday, May 21, 2011 9:56 AM
To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Computer science textbooks

Well,

THere is
www.bookshare.org
which has books on a variety of subjects. There's some computer
science books but not many, sadly.
Usually when I need a book i try to hunt it down somewhere on the web.
I know i should be crediting the author and apreciating his work and
all that but especially here in Holland it's a royal pain to get
digitized English books or even dutch ones on that subject, apart
from audio which in my opinion just isn't cutting it for this kind of material.
There is IRC channels devoted to sharing these texts as well.
If you want to go the more legal and conventional route, you could
try obtaining a scanning package that does the job well for books.
For example the iRead Now package by handyTech comes with a camera
that scans a page and does OCr in aproximately five seconds. Now
doing this for 700 pages is a bit outrageous still but you can do it in chunks.

I guess thats the only ways I can think of so far.

Florian
On May 21, 2011, at 3:07 PM, David Tseng wrote:

Hey guys,

Curious to know what people do for obtaining accessible texts
especially *after* finishing a degree.  Out of personal interest,
I'd like to get a few key books on my bookshelf as reference or just
to deepen my own knowledge of a specific area.  Without access to a
school's lab/resources, I've kind of turned to sources like 24x7,
Safari, and other technical e-book sites, but have found them very
lacking wrt selection, and when they do have a book, varying levels
of access to diagrams.  RFB&D's/Learning Alley's also quite lacking
and listening to CS books can be somewhat mind numbing.

Short of calling up every university out there or employing my own
diagram to text human translater, what have people done here?  I
know some of us are in industry, so am curious to know.
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--

Take care,
Ty
my website:
http://tds-solutions.net
my blog:
http://tds-solutions.net/blog
skype: st8amnd127
My programs don't have bugs; they're randomly added features!

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