The AnswerSleuth: google directory
Some companies use wikis like Hive Wiki as their only collaborative software and as a replacement for static intranets. A Hive Wiki can enable your company to effectively share knowledge. Go Here To Setup Your Free And Easy HiveWiki Today!
Home | Edit | Index | Recent Changes

google directory

Search for google directory
  1. AOL UK Search - Web directory derived from the Open Directory Project with search results provided by Google. search.aol.co.uk Mama
  2. Google, Amazon, and Beyond- Creating and Consuming Web Services
    Cover of ISBN 1590591313Google, Amazon, and Beyond
    Creating and Consuming Web Services:
    • Book by Alexander Nakhimovsky and Tom Myers.
  3. Google - Каталог ссылок на ресурсы сети Интернет в разных странах мира на основе данных глобального сетевого справочника "Open Directory Project". directory.google.ru Mama
  4. Infotoday - Google Introduces Web Directory Using Netscape's Open Directory Project Data. www.infotoday.com Mama
  5. Google Directory - Links to official and unofficial Google tools and resources. www.google-directory.co.uk Mama
  6. Google Directory - 2004 Google. Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web. ... Directory. . News. . . . Directory Help. The web organized by ... directory.google.com Mama
  7. Local Ad Search Directory - A searchable directory based on the Open Directory, which gives prominence to category descriptions. Integrated website snapshots from Thumbshots and advertising by Google. www.localadsearch.com Mama
  8. Google Gids: World/Nederlands - Ordent de sites in de Open Directory categorieën op basis van hun populariteit. directory.google.com Mama
  9. SServ.com - A searchable directory taken from the Open Directory, with advertisements supplied by Google. www.sserv.com Mama
  10. Google, Katalog WWW - World/Polska - Zawartość katalogu Google powstaje w oparciu o zasoby Open Directory, a wzbogacana jest przy użyciu własnej technologii Google. directory.google.com Mama
  11. GOOGLE/PIXO IMPLEMENT WIRELESS INTERNET SEARCH.(Company Business and Marketing)- An article from- Telephone IP News
    • Book
  12. Google Australia - Offers the choice of searching the whole web or web pages from Australia. Also advanced search, image and groups search, news and directory from the Open Directory. www.google.com.au Mama
  13. Google Verzeichnis - Web Bilder Groups Verzeichnis News Froogle Neu! Einstellungen Verzeichnis-Hilfe Das Web nach Themen in Kategorien geordnet. Computer Hardware , Software , .. www.google.de Mama
  14. Google Directory - Arts > Music - ... directory is based on the Open Directory and is enhanced using Google's ... Modified by Google - ©2004 Google. Advertise with Us - Jobs, Press, ... directory.google.com Mama
  15. Google, Inc. News - ... Front Page » Business News » Media » Google, Inc. Google, Inc. News Google, Inc. News continually updated from ... Thursday | ... www.topix.net Mama
  16. Google Directory - Science > Math - ... directory is based on the Open Directory and is enhanced using Google's ... Modified by Google - ©2004 Google. Advertise with Us - Jobs, Press, ... directory.google.com Mama
  17. Google Directory - Science > Biology - ... directory is based on the Open Directory and is enhanced using Google's ... Modified by Google - ©2004 Google. Advertise with Us - Jobs, Press, ... directory.google.com Mama
  18. Trattopunto.it - Directory web interamente basata su database ODP, offre la ricerca con Dmoz e Google. web-directory.trattopunto.it Mama
  19. Google Directory中文简体 - Google网页目录。 directory.google.com Mama
  20. Googlepedia- The Ultimate Google Resource
    Cover of ISBN 078973639XGooglepedia
    The Ultimate Google Resource:
    • Book by Michael Miller.
  21. Northwest Arkansas Community Bulletin Board | Fayetteville, ... - An alternative source for news and information about Northwest Arkansas. nw-ar.com Mama
  22. Google Directory - Arts - ... directory is based on the Open Directory and is enhanced using Google's ... Modified by Google - ©2004 Google. Advertise with Us - Jobs, Press, ... directory.google.com Mama
  23. Google Directory - Computers > Programming > Languages - ... directory is based on the Open Directory and is enhanced using Google's ... Modified by Google - ©2004 Google. Advertise with Us - Jobs, Press, ... directory.google.com Mama
  24. Google Help Central - Google Help Center Home - About Google Google does not display pop-up advertising. Here's why . Find answers and discuss Google services in our user ... www.google.com Mama
  25. Google Directory - Reference Libraries Library and Information Science ... - Libraries Library and Information Science Technical Services ... directory.google.com Mama
  26. Directory Web di Google - Web Immagini Gruppi Novità! Directory News altro » Preferenze Il Web organizzato per canali e suddiviso in categorie. Categorie di ricerca in Italiano: ... www.google.it Mama
  27. Library Reference Search Web Directory - Offers a version of the Open Directory Project using a site-directory.org script. Advertising supplied by Google. www.libraryreference.org Mama
  28. Google Directory - Recreation > Travel - ... Open Directory Project - Become an Editor Modified by Google - ©2004 ... Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.. Submit a ... directory.google.com Mama
  29. Google- Top 100 Simplified Tips & Tricks (Visual Read Less, Learn More)
    Cover of ISBN 0764576976Google
    Top 100 Simplified Tips & Tricks (Visual Read Less, Learn More):
    • Book by Joe Kraynak.

    Google, Amazon, and Beyond- Creating and Consuming Web Services

    Cover of ISBN 1590591313Google, Amazon, and Beyond
    Creating and Consuming Web Services:
    Book by Alexander Nakhimovsky and Tom Myers. Apress 352 pages Paperback Published 2003-12-01. Description:

    While many books are focused on the underlying technologies of Web Services and others are dedicated to providing Web Services, few books show how to consume Web Services. This new book, Google, Amazon and Beyond: Creating and Consuming Web Services, provides a thorough review of the technologies and techniques for connecting client applications to services of all kinds. Using a decidedly hands-on approach, the authors show extensive examples of programming with XML, SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI in a variety of programming languages.

    Technology involved: Java, Perl, XML, XSLT, WSDL, SOAP, XML-RPC, UDDI, [JavaScript]Create?, .NET, JSP, RSS.

    Description: WEB SERVICES ARE HOT!

    While many books are focused on the underlying technologies of Web Services and others are dedicated to providing Web sServices, few books show how to consume Web Services. Google, Amazon, and Beyond: Creating and Consuming Web Services provides a thorough review of the technologies and techniques for connecting client applications to services of all kinds.

    Using a decidedly hands-on approach, Nakhimovsky and Myers show extensive examples of programming with XML, SOAP, REST, and WSDL in [JavaScript]Create? (tested in IE and Mozilla) and in Java (using open-source tools available on Windows, Linux, and OS X).

    Technology involved: XML, [JavaScript]Create?, SOAP, Java, JDBC, REST, XSLT, JSP, WSDL, [WebDAV]Create?

        • Review:: 'Web services in Java well covered As titles go "Google, Amazon, and Beyond" sounds to me like Buzz Lightyear's latest slogan, but it's actually quite a good book about writing software to consume and provide web services. The first two chapters are introductory material, though the authors quickly introduce some code with [JavaScript]Create? routines to talk to both Google and Amazon. The second of them does a good job explaining the intricacies of DOM and how you use it to build a web page in Java. Then the authors get down to some serious work at using Java, including stand-alone applications and applets, to access web services. They move fast throughout the book; this is not one to read quickly or without ready access to a computer. That said, the writing is good; the text is understandable and all the code is well explained. The book covers a wide gamut of techniques and technologies, including SOAP and REST on the query side, and XSLT and XPath on the output side. Then the book moves on to instructions for offering your own services. This part of the book starts off with [WebDAV]Create? using Tomcat, though there is a short digression into Java Server Pages before really getting down to the nitty gritty. Finally the book shows how to use WSDL and Axis to easily create full web applications. You can see that this volume covers a lot of territory. This breadth may well be the book's largest flaw; its wide reach means no topic gets a really deep coverage and a number of topics do not get the coverage they deserve. Indeed I would have to say that only a much better Java programmer than I would get full value from this volume -- there were parts where the authors lost me entirely and it took an effort to get back my understanding, occasionally resorting to a Java manual. The publishers have a page for the book that has an example chapter, table of contents, index and source code. The example chapter, 4, details how to build a SOAP server using Java and provides an excellent example for the book. If you're a little unsure of your Java skills, take a look at this chapter and see if you can easily understand the code and explanation. If you can, then this volume should have no surprises for you. It should be said that nothing about the book's cover tells you how much of it relies on Java, though a good read of the table of contents makes it obvious. I would have personally preferred a book that was more general in the programming language it used, covering more of the tactics and methods rather than examining specific code. If, on the other hand, you are an experienced Java programmer looking for a book on programming web services in that language, then this is an excellent volume.
        • Review:: 'A bunch of technologies Web Services are a promising future for distributed computations on the net. So far there has been much speculation. But to develop anything nontrivial presents a severe problem to programmers. It is hard to simulate a large, multigigabyte database, that has credible applications.

          Luckily, two successful Internet companies, Google and Amazon, have done so. They offer access to their data via XML queries. The authors thus explain how you can sign up with these companies and use their Web Services as a testbed. They treat each company separately and show examples of how you can mine the data and possibly integrate it with your own data and display the results, typically in a browser fashion.

          The companies are used as learning examples, since many of you are likely to have already used their regular browser based offerings. The authors use this familiarity to motivate why and how you can get at the data, without all that HTML clutter of a pre-Web Service screen scraping approach. They also use this as a vehicle to explain how to use DOM, SOAP, XSLT and JSPs on your website, as part of your Web Service. Tomcat is chosen as the web container because it is very stable and, let's face it, free. So you do gain fluency in an impressive number of important packages.

          They even offer examples of how to use DAV. This, in the 10 year history of the web, refers to distributed authoring. It was present in the http specifications of 1992/3. But this has rarely been implemented in browsers or http servers ever since. A backwater that is now starting to attract attention. Especially when recast in the rubric of Web Services.

        • Review:: 'Too much triviality Yes, this book deals with many aspects of Web Services technology.

          Unfortunately, the authors haven't hesitated to fill this book with a lot of triviality and white space. You'll have to read through many extensive descriptions and a lot of javascript that doesn't deserve much attention. Selecting the right object in IE or Netscape makes the presented code qualify as a Cross-Browser Framework. And when moving from javascript to java, the authors seem to be unaware of any OO methodology, sticking to static procedural implementations. Experienced java and C++ programmers will gradually loose interest when reading this book.

          Where other authors delightfully underline the Author's Press promise, these authors bring disappointment to the serious reader.

    GOOGLE/PIXO IMPLEMENT WIRELESS INTERNET SEARCH.(Company Business and Marketing)- An article from- Telephone IP News

    Book - Worldwide Videotex 3 pages Digital Published 2000-11-01. Description: This digital document is an article from Telephone IP News, published by Worldwide Videotex on November 1, 2000. The length of the article is 822 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

    Citation Details
    Title: GOOGLE/PIXO IMPLEMENT WIRELESS INTERNET SEARCH.(Company Business and Marketing)
    Publication: Telephone IP News (Newsletter)
    Date: November 1, 2000
    Publisher: Worldwide Videotex
    Volume: 11 Issue: 11 Page: NA

    Distributed by Thomson Gale

    From Google

    google directory

    Search for google directory
    1. AOL UK Search - Web directory derived from the Open Directory Project with search results provided by Google. search.aol.co.uk Mama
    2. Google, Amazon, and Beyond- Creating and Consuming Web Services
      Cover of ISBN 1590591313Google, Amazon, and Beyond
      Creating and Consuming Web Services:
    • Book by Joe Kraynak.

Google, Amazon, and Beyond- Creating and Consuming Web Services

Cover of ISBN 1590591313Google, Amazon, and Beyond
Creating and Consuming Web Services:
Book by Alexander Nakhimovsky and Tom Myers. Apress 352 pages Paperback Published 2003-12-01. Description:

While many books are focused on the underlying technologies of Web Services and others are dedicated to providing Web Services, few books show how to consume Web Services. This new book, Google, Amazon and Beyond: Creating and Consuming Web Services, provides a thorough review of the technologies and techniques for connecting client applications to services of all kinds. Using a decidedly hands-on approach, the authors show extensive examples of programming with XML, SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI in a variety of programming languages.

Technology involved: Java, Perl, XML, XSLT, WSDL, SOAP, XML-RPC, UDDI, [JavaScript]Create?, .NET, JSP, RSS.

Description: WEB SERVICES ARE HOT!

While many books are focused on the underlying technologies of Web Services and others are dedicated to providing Web sServices, few books show how to consume Web Services. Google, Amazon, and Beyond: Creating and Consuming Web Services provides a thorough review of the technologies and techniques for connecting client applications to services of all kinds.

Using a decidedly hands-on approach, Nakhimovsky and Myers show extensive examples of programming with XML, SOAP, REST, and WSDL in [JavaScript]Create? (tested in IE and Mozilla) and in Java (using open-source tools available on Windows, Linux, and OS X).

Technology involved: XML, [JavaScript]Create?, SOAP, Java, JDBC, REST, XSLT, JSP, WSDL, [WebDAV]Create?

      • Review:: 'Web services in Java well covered As titles go "Google, Amazon, and Beyond" sounds to me like Buzz Lightyear's latest slogan, but it's actually quite a good book about writing software to consume and provide web services. The first two chapters are introductory material, though the authors quickly introduce some code with [JavaScript]Create? routines to talk to both Google and Amazon. The second of them does a good job explaining the intricacies of DOM and how you use it to build a web page in Java. Then the authors get down to some serious work at using Java, including stand-alone applications and applets, to access web services. They move fast throughout the book; this is not one to read quickly or without ready access to a computer. That said, the writing is good; the text is understandable and all the code is well explained. The book covers a wide gamut of techniques and technologies, including SOAP and REST on the query side, and XSLT and XPath on the output side. Then the book moves on to instructions for offering your own services. This part of the book starts off with [WebDAV]Create? using Tomcat, though there is a short digression into Java Server Pages before really getting down to the nitty gritty. Finally the book shows how to use WSDL and Axis to easily create full web applications. You can see that this volume covers a lot of territory. This breadth may well be the book's largest flaw; its wide reach means no topic gets a really deep coverage and a number of topics do not get the coverage they deserve. Indeed I would have to say that only a much better Java programmer than I would get full value from this volume -- there were parts where the authors lost me entirely and it took an effort to get back my understanding, occasionally resorting to a Java manual. The publishers have a page for the book that has an example chapter, table of contents, index and source code. The example chapter, 4, details how to build a SOAP server using Java and provides an excellent example for the book. If you're a little unsure of your Java skills, take a look at this chapter and see if you can easily understand the code and explanation. If you can, then this volume should have no surprises for you. It should be said that nothing about the book's cover tells you how much of it relies on Java, though a good read of the table of contents makes it obvious. I would have personally preferred a book that was more general in the programming language it used, covering more of the tactics and methods rather than examining specific code. If, on the other hand, you are an experienced Java programmer looking for a book on programming web services in that language, then this is an excellent volume.
      • Review:: 'A bunch of technologies Web Services are a promising future for distributed computations on the net. So far there has been much speculation. But to develop anything nontrivial presents a severe problem to programmers. It is hard to simulate a large, multigigabyte database, that has credible applications.

        Luckily, two successful Internet companies, Google and Amazon, have done so. They offer access to their data via XML queries. The authors thus explain how you can sign up with these companies and use their Web Services as a testbed. They treat each company separately and show examples of how you can mine the data and possibly integrate it with your own data and display the results, typically in a browser fashion.

        The companies are used as learning examples, since many of you are likely to have already used their regular browser based offerings. The authors use this familiarity to motivate why and how you can get at the data, without all that HTML clutter of a pre-Web Service screen scraping approach. They also use this as a vehicle to explain how to use DOM, SOAP, XSLT and JSPs on your website, as part of your Web Service. Tomcat is chosen as the web container because it is very stable and, let's face it, free. So you do gain fluency in an impressive number of important packages.

        They even offer examples of how to use DAV. This, in the 10 year history of the web, refers to distributed authoring. It was present in the http specifications of 1992/3. But this has rarely been implemented in browsers or http servers ever since. A backwater that is now starting to attract attention. Especially when recast in the rubric of Web Services.

      • Review:: 'Too much triviality Yes, this book deals with many aspects of Web Services technology.

        Unfortunately, the authors haven't hesitated to fill this book with a lot of triviality and white space. You'll have to read through many extensive descriptions and a lot of javascript that doesn't deserve much attention. Selecting the right object in IE or Netscape makes the presented code qualify as a Cross-Browser Framework. And when moving from javascript to java, the authors seem to be unaware of any OO methodology, sticking to static procedural implementations. Experienced java and C++ programmers will gradually loose interest when reading this book.

        Where other authors delightfully underline the Author's Press promise, these authors bring disappointment to the serious reader.

GOOGLE/PIXO IMPLEMENT WIRELESS INTERNET SEARCH.(Company Business and Marketing)- An article from- Telephone IP News

Book - Worldwide Videotex 3 pages Digital Published 2000-11-01. Description: This digital document is an article from Telephone IP News, published by Worldwide Videotex on November 1, 2000. The length of the article is 822 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: GOOGLE/PIXO IMPLEMENT WIRELESS INTERNET SEARCH.(Company Business and Marketing)
Publication: Telephone IP News (Newsletter)
Date: November 1, 2000
Publisher: Worldwide Videotex
Volume: 11 Issue: 11 Page: NA

Distributed by Thomson Gale

From Google

Fresh copy to be cached until 11:01:44 PM
60 hits

This Page: Edit | History
This Wiki: Home | Related To google_directory | Index | Recent Changes | Random Page | Search
Login | Create New Wiki | Wiki List
11/21/2008 3:01 PM v0.61.106 ADBEFEED
Wiki Site Resource List 390ms