Showing posts with label google suggest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google suggest. Show all posts

Monday, April 12, 2010

501 Web Site Secrets: Unleash the Power of Google®, Amazon®, eBay® and More [Michael Miller]

501 Web Site Secrets: Unleash the Power of Google®, Amazon®, eBay® and More [Michael Miller] is one of the best book for Google, eBay and many mores. The feature of this book are:
  • Shows Internet users how to get the most out of Internet searches, portals, and commerce sites
  • Covers using Google to solve mathematical equations, making search engines safe for kids, harnessing the full power of Yahoo!, and getting the best bargains on shopping sites
  • Explains how to search for street addresses and phone numbers, stock quotes and other financial information, MP3s and other digital music, computer programs and utilities, medical information, legal information, genealogical information, job listings, and more
  • Reveals the secrets behind directory sites, indexing, and search result rankings



Amazon.com Mashups [Francis Shanahan]

"This book will not only demonstrate how developers can utilize Amazon Web services to create cool mashups but will also help them convert it to money-making mashups - 'cashups.'"
—Jinesh Varia, Amazon Web Services Developer Relations Team 
Amazon.com is advancing the boundaries of the Internet through their powerful suite of web services. Innovative developers are combining Amazon data with other freely available sources to create new and interesting applications known as Mashups. This book teaches you the techniques behind mashup applications and for the first time shows you how to build them yourself.

The examples in this book show you how to integrate Amazon web services with APIs from Yahoo!, eBay, Google and YouTube. You'll learn how to combine data from disparate sources to create new applications using next generation browser techniques such as AJAX, JSON and Dynamic Scripting. You will learn how to re-purpose web service data so that it can be consumed from mobile devices such as a cell phone or PDA. Because both the theory and code are explained, you'll be able to easily take the lessons in this book to build your own killer mashup applications.