Books: Difference between revisions

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|title=Computer Networks, 5th ed.
|author=Andrew S. Tanenbaum, and David J. Wetherall
|year=2010
|supp=[http://www.computernetworks5e.org/ Link]
|description=''Computer Networks, 5/e'' is appropriate for Computer Networking or Introduction to Networking courses at both the undergraduate and graduate level in Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, CIS, MIS, and Business Departments.
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|title=Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach, 6th ed.
|author=James F. Kurose, Keith W. Ross
|year=2012
|supp=[http://www.pearsonhighered.com/product?isbn=0132856204 Link]
|description=Computer Networking continues with an early emphasis on application-layer paradigms and application programming interfaces (the top layer), encouraging a hands-on experience with protocols and networking concepts, before working down the protocol stack to more abstract layers.
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{{Book|ISBN=0201550210|ASIN=0201550210
|title=Inside AppleTalk, 2nd ed.
|year=1990
|author=Gursharan S. Sidhu, Richard F. Andrews, and Alan B. Oppenheimer
|supp=[http://web.archive.org/web/20011124183351/http://developer.apple.com/macos/opentransport/docs/dev/Inside_AppleTalk.pdf Free book]
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|title=The Little Black Book: Mail Bonding with OSI Directory Services
|author=Marshall T. Rose
|year=1991
|supp=N/A
|description=From the author of the bestselling The Open Book and The Simple Book, this comprehensive guide to directory services technology provides the underlying infrastructure to a variety of communication services. The guide explores protocols and protocol suites, giving the reader techniques on simplified message handling and routing over electronic networks. It discusses the network model message handling, user agents, message transfer, gateway, and more used in electronic communications. The handbook introduces such topics as X.500 directory, and will be of interest to those involved with electronic mail, network communications, and other electronic networks.
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|title=The Open Book: A Practical Perspective on OSI
|author=Marshall T. Rose
|year=1990
|supp=N/A
|description=The OSI protocol suite (an internationally standardized set of rules for computer communications) offers a unique promise: it has the potential to provide a political and technical solution to world-wide networking. Computers--from supers to workstations and PCs, from the executive suite to the laboratory, and from Palo Alto to London, or anywhere--can all share a common set of rules for communicating. But, with any emerging technology, there are numerous questions to be answered and issues to be addressed. The Open Book is designed to examine those complex questions and issues and provide a balanced set of perspectives.
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{|
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| rowspan="56" valign="top" align="center" width="200" |
[[Image:ISBN_0321336313.jpg|120px]]<br/>[http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0321336313/osdev-20/ http://wiki.osdev.org/images/3/3a/Buy_from_amazon.gif]<br/><br/>
[[Image:ISBN_020163354X.jpg|120px]]<br/>[http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/020163354X/osdev-20/ http://wiki.osdev.org/images/3/3a/Buy_from_amazon.gif]<br/><br/>
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|-
| valign="top" height="10" | '''Author(s):''' Gary R. Wright, Kevin R. Fall, and W. Richard Stevens
|-
| valign="top" height="10" | '''Year:''' 2011 (Vol1), 1995 (Vol2), 1996 (Vol3)
|-
| valign="top" height="10" | '''Supplementary material and/or errata:''' [http://www.kohala.com/start/unpv22e/unpv22e.html Volume 2], [http://www.kohala.com/start/tcpipiv3.html Volume 3]
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