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  • monique - Love this book!!!I love this book, it's Reed's best cookbook yet. I bought a copy for myself, took it to work, passed it around, and now 5 co workers bought a copy.
    I love that there are color pictures for each recipe. The recipes are easy to follow and have a color picture of each step so you know if you're doing it right, and the ingredient list is easy to find ingredients.
    This is going to be my Christmas present for at least 2 of my sisters who are just starting to cook.
  • Kevyn Sexton "Kevyn" - A Useful BookI have to say that I am becoming less of a fan of Dr. Phil as time goes on. His show has become one big advertisement of his book. He is always mentioning his success and that of his wife and kids. I grew up in an affluent part of OC and many people were like that, particularly the ones who grew up poor. They are very impressed with their own success and want everyone to know it.

    That said, the book does have some helpful information, but it is very scant. The first chapter mostly tries to convince you how much the book is going to help. It is one big sales job. However, some of his points did get me thinking about my own life. I can now understand the doctor I dated for six months and why I couldn't get him to understand my point of view no matter how I tried. Dr. Phil would say he lacks empathy and therefore does not have the ability to see my point of view. I get it. I suppose you'd have to lack empathy if you worked in the ER, but it sure reeks havoc on one's personal life.

    The other baiter in my life is my daughter. She married a sailor on the same day that Michael Jackson died. She virtually abandoned me. I heard from her very infrequently. She sends beautiful gifts and cards on my birthday and Mother's Day and that's about it. I feel that she does it to cover up the fact that she doesn't want to talk to me. I'll be the first to admit that I'm not perfect, but I did raise her on my own and she is able to have a good relationship with a man. My stepkids live a life of turmoil and chaos with bad relationships and illegal drugs so I did something right.

    People say she'll appreciate my efforts one day, but I don't think so. She is a manipulator like her dad by genetics (and Dr. Phil does say genetics play a part). She's working for her own best interest and she loves this guy because he doesn't make her work. She has no education and isn't gong anywhere career-wise. If I express my concern, I am "picking on her" and she becomes the victim. Now that I've read Dr. Phil's book, I see her in a different light and I am willing to let go. She does not have the power to hurt me anymore and she may think I'm the bad guy, but that is just too bad for her. People who are continually hurtful to me just aren't on the agenda anymore, no matter who they are.

    Thanks for the insight, Dr. Phil. You're book has been useful.
  • John Duncan - Perhaps the best of a superb seriesThis is the fourth of Edward Tufte's books on the graphical display of information, and one might fear that he might be stretching the point too far and running out of ideas. One would be wrong, however, because this is a wonderful book, and is possibly the best of the four. It is a must-have, must-read, must-understand, must-apply sort of book. No one who is seriously interested in preparing illustrations for conveying information can afford to be unfamiliar with Tufte's ideas.

    Inevitably there is some overlap with the earlier books, but this is deliberate policy, not carelessness. As Tufte makes clear, it is better to repeat information than to expect readers to hunt for it somewhere else. Many potentially useful books have been rendered much more difficult to use than they ought to be, at worst by gathering together the artwork in one place, far away from the text that it relates to, or, slightly less bad, by failing to ensure that it appears on the same double-page spread as its accompanying text. Tufte doesn't even believe in referring to tables and figures by numbers, because he considers that any illustration can just be introduced with "here" or "in this example", etc., if it is properly placed. This is what he practises himself, but the technical demands of commercial publishers will make it difficult advice to follow, unfortunately. However, with modern computer-based publishing it ought to become easy in the future if enough pressure is put on publishers. If Galileo could integrate all of his diagrams into his text, why can we not do that now, with far more technical aids at our disposal than were available to him?

    The main new idea that appears in Beautiful Evidence is the description of sparklines: small, data-intense, word-like graphics -- word-like in the sense that a sparkline can appear right in the middle of a sentence, but can contain the equivalent of hundreds of numbers. Sparklines are ideal for conveying time series, such as a series of blood-glucose measurements for a diabetes patient. With suitable shading they can indicately instantly whether the measurements fall within the normal ranges.

    Tufte's short pamphlet about the presentation software PowerPoint, previously available as a separate publication, now appears as a chapter in Beautiful Evidence. His main points are that PowerPoint slides are typically so low in information-content that they insult the audiences they are directed towards, and that bulleted lists of slogans are just a pretence at supplying real arguments.

    Charles Joseph Minard's map of Napoleon's invasion of Russia already played a prominent role in the first book in the series, The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, and it reappears here, with a whole chapter devoted to analysing it. This is space well used, because to emulate Minard it is essential to go beyond a casual appreciation of his work as excellent; it demands a careful analysis of what it is that makes it excellent.
  • Carolyn - Norton Internet Security ReviewFirst computer I had was a Gateway in 2002 which I used Norton on and then changed to ZoneAlarm. Once I purchased a new HP in 2010, Norton came with a 15 month subscription free. It worked out pretty good and after doing a lot of research once it came time to renew not only once but twice I've decided to stay with Norton. This will be my 3rd. yr. in a row using Norton. So far so good.