Thanks CP
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It all started with this article: http://www.codeproject.com/Ajax/ajax_scribble.asp[^] The article itself is now outdated but someone from Manning publication saw that article and my other articles and asked me to write a book on the then Atlas and the now ASP.NET Ajax. In between lot of things happened like dramatic changes in the ASP.NET Ajax library and lot of work pressure but eventually thanks to my co-authors Alessandro Gallo and David Barkol the book got completed and now I am holding it in my hand. We were also very fortunate that Scott Guthrie and Betrand Delroy (one of the main developers of ASP.NET Ajax) wrote two forewords. It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.:) I am not the only one who have landed into a book deal due to the article here on CP: Nish is another one, Brian another one and there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
Congratulations!! Great job! It's on my Amazon shopping cart for next time! :)
Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now
Can't be named? Did he develop a super-compression algorithm to speed the Internet by 1Gx (one billion times)? ;P
Luis Alonso Ramos Intelectix Chihuahua, Mexico
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Congratulations!! Great job! It's on my Amazon shopping cart for next time! :)
Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now
Can't be named? Did he develop a super-compression algorithm to speed the Internet by 1Gx (one billion times)? ;P
Luis Alonso Ramos Intelectix Chihuahua, Mexico
Luis Alonso Ramos wrote:
Did he develop a super-compression algorithm to speed the Internet by 1Gx (one billion times)
No! But he did some amazing things.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
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It all started with this article: http://www.codeproject.com/Ajax/ajax_scribble.asp[^] The article itself is now outdated but someone from Manning publication saw that article and my other articles and asked me to write a book on the then Atlas and the now ASP.NET Ajax. In between lot of things happened like dramatic changes in the ASP.NET Ajax library and lot of work pressure but eventually thanks to my co-authors Alessandro Gallo and David Barkol the book got completed and now I am holding it in my hand. We were also very fortunate that Scott Guthrie and Betrand Delroy (one of the main developers of ASP.NET Ajax) wrote two forewords. It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.:) I am not the only one who have landed into a book deal due to the article here on CP: Nish is another one, Brian another one and there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
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It all started with this article: http://www.codeproject.com/Ajax/ajax_scribble.asp[^] The article itself is now outdated but someone from Manning publication saw that article and my other articles and asked me to write a book on the then Atlas and the now ASP.NET Ajax. In between lot of things happened like dramatic changes in the ASP.NET Ajax library and lot of work pressure but eventually thanks to my co-authors Alessandro Gallo and David Barkol the book got completed and now I am holding it in my hand. We were also very fortunate that Scott Guthrie and Betrand Delroy (one of the main developers of ASP.NET Ajax) wrote two forewords. It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.:) I am not the only one who have landed into a book deal due to the article here on CP: Nish is another one, Brian another one and there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
Congratulations Rama. :)
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
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It all started with this article: http://www.codeproject.com/Ajax/ajax_scribble.asp[^] The article itself is now outdated but someone from Manning publication saw that article and my other articles and asked me to write a book on the then Atlas and the now ASP.NET Ajax. In between lot of things happened like dramatic changes in the ASP.NET Ajax library and lot of work pressure but eventually thanks to my co-authors Alessandro Gallo and David Barkol the book got completed and now I am holding it in my hand. We were also very fortunate that Scott Guthrie and Betrand Delroy (one of the main developers of ASP.NET Ajax) wrote two forewords. It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.:) I am not the only one who have landed into a book deal due to the article here on CP: Nish is another one, Brian another one and there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.
Congratulations!!
Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
... I ... have landed into a book deal ...
Could you please share what was the deal like, financially? You don't have to give your own deal... Average or indicative figures would do.
---------- http://www.JadhavResearch.info
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It all started with this article: http://www.codeproject.com/Ajax/ajax_scribble.asp[^] The article itself is now outdated but someone from Manning publication saw that article and my other articles and asked me to write a book on the then Atlas and the now ASP.NET Ajax. In between lot of things happened like dramatic changes in the ASP.NET Ajax library and lot of work pressure but eventually thanks to my co-authors Alessandro Gallo and David Barkol the book got completed and now I am holding it in my hand. We were also very fortunate that Scott Guthrie and Betrand Delroy (one of the main developers of ASP.NET Ajax) wrote two forewords. It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.:) I am not the only one who have landed into a book deal due to the article here on CP: Nish is another one, Brian another one and there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
Well done Rama :)
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...
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It all started with this article: http://www.codeproject.com/Ajax/ajax_scribble.asp[^] The article itself is now outdated but someone from Manning publication saw that article and my other articles and asked me to write a book on the then Atlas and the now ASP.NET Ajax. In between lot of things happened like dramatic changes in the ASP.NET Ajax library and lot of work pressure but eventually thanks to my co-authors Alessandro Gallo and David Barkol the book got completed and now I am holding it in my hand. We were also very fortunate that Scott Guthrie and Betrand Delroy (one of the main developers of ASP.NET Ajax) wrote two forewords. It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.:) I am not the only one who have landed into a book deal due to the article here on CP: Nish is another one, Brian another one and there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
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It all started with this article: http://www.codeproject.com/Ajax/ajax_scribble.asp[^] The article itself is now outdated but someone from Manning publication saw that article and my other articles and asked me to write a book on the then Atlas and the now ASP.NET Ajax. In between lot of things happened like dramatic changes in the ASP.NET Ajax library and lot of work pressure but eventually thanks to my co-authors Alessandro Gallo and David Barkol the book got completed and now I am holding it in my hand. We were also very fortunate that Scott Guthrie and Betrand Delroy (one of the main developers of ASP.NET Ajax) wrote two forewords. It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.:) I am not the only one who have landed into a book deal due to the article here on CP: Nish is another one, Brian another one and there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
Congrats. Everything looks fine. Good cover. But price around 1200INR.. This is bit tough.
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It all started with this article: http://www.codeproject.com/Ajax/ajax_scribble.asp[^] The article itself is now outdated but someone from Manning publication saw that article and my other articles and asked me to write a book on the then Atlas and the now ASP.NET Ajax. In between lot of things happened like dramatic changes in the ASP.NET Ajax library and lot of work pressure but eventually thanks to my co-authors Alessandro Gallo and David Barkol the book got completed and now I am holding it in my hand. We were also very fortunate that Scott Guthrie and Betrand Delroy (one of the main developers of ASP.NET Ajax) wrote two forewords. It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.:) I am not the only one who have landed into a book deal due to the article here on CP: Nish is another one, Brian another one and there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
Excellent. CP needs to have a bookshop.:)
only two letters away from being an asset
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It all started with this article: http://www.codeproject.com/Ajax/ajax_scribble.asp[^] The article itself is now outdated but someone from Manning publication saw that article and my other articles and asked me to write a book on the then Atlas and the now ASP.NET Ajax. In between lot of things happened like dramatic changes in the ASP.NET Ajax library and lot of work pressure but eventually thanks to my co-authors Alessandro Gallo and David Barkol the book got completed and now I am holding it in my hand. We were also very fortunate that Scott Guthrie and Betrand Delroy (one of the main developers of ASP.NET Ajax) wrote two forewords. It is a great feeling to hold the book which has your contributions in it.:) I am not the only one who have landed into a book deal due to the article here on CP: Nish is another one, Brian another one and there is another I-can't-name author who is working on a book now.
Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action
Very cool! Congrats. I'll have to pick up a copy.
"Half this game is ninety percent mental." - Yogi Berra If you can read thank a teacher, if you can read in English, thank a Marine.