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Reviews for Wavelet, Subband and Block Transforms in Communications and Multimedia

 Wavelet magazine reviews

The average rating for Wavelet, Subband and Block Transforms in Communications and Multimedia based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2010-07-19 00:00:00
1999was given a rating of 3 stars Jason Kramer
I am not in this book's target audience. Whereas the book is aimed at experienced java developers who are just getting started with rails and want to take advantage of JRuby, I've rarely touched Java but have lots of ruby and rails experience and am interested in JRuby mainly to see where I might be able to take advantage of java libraries, or ship my ruby apps into new contexts. In that respect, the book was helpful but there's probably space for a companion volume for people like me. The book takes a measured pace, introducing Rails early on and then building in different components from the Java world as it works through four different projects. Use of JDBC within a rails app, calling ruby code from Java, deployment strategies, packaging a Rails app as a .jar that can be dropped into an application server, and making use of java for interfacing with SOAP web services are all covered. Readers will probably need to spend some time experimenting with each feature to really get comfortable with them, but the book works well to get you started and point in the right direction. The introduction to Ruby and Rails is a case in point, as Ola dives right in to his examples after a brief lead-in. That may work well for experienced developers who will enjoy exploring the accompanying code, but it is worth being aware of. It did feel like there were some missed opportunities later in the book, particularly in the final project, to introduce more of Rails' "RESTful" features since that example really invited that style of design, and it would have been interesting to have some discussion of the pros and cons of treating the libraries built to interface with external services as models within a rails app, making the interface more transparent. I'm also not quite sure where the "Web 2.0 Projects" line in the title comes from. The final project interfaces with amazon web services, which I suppose might get thrown onto the "web 2.0" bandwagon, but don't go into the book expecting a series of stereotypical "web 2.0" projects. It's an introduction to JRuby on Rails for Java developers, whatever approach to the web they may be taking. JRuby is a really exciting technology that promises to help developers take another step towards picking technology based on their projects, not just the platforms their organisations may have standardised on over the past decades. If you're a java developer wanting to learn how to make use of JRuby and looking for some help to get up and running, this book is likely to give you just that. Disclaimer: I was sent a copy of this book for review by the publisher.
Review # 2 was written on 2013-06-11 00:00:00
1999was given a rating of 3 stars Shane Flood
I like this book. Its a great introduction to developing with Flex 2. I like how it doesnt assume you're going to be using Flex Builder and talks about using the command line tools. The writing is good and easy to follow, the examples are clean.


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