DotNetNuke For Dummies
Author: Chris Paterra
Do you want to develop Web sites without the help of a programmer? Lucky for you there’s DotNetNuke, a content management system that allows you to build and maintain dynamic Web sites just by using a Web browser.
DotNetNuke For Dummies helps you get down to business and shows you how to create a user-friendly Web site. You’ll find out how you can build and manage a flexible, versatile site with all the advantages an open-source application offers, use convenient modules, build a community, and save some money at the same time. This plain-English guide lets you discover how to:
• Install, run, and troubleshoot DotNetNuke
• Change and customize portal settings
• Add and manage pages on your site
• Make your site look professional
• Deliver contents with Text/HTML
• Add news feeds, online surveys, and banners
• Interact with visitors through blogging, feedback comments, and forums
• Create an e-business
• Customize the look of your site with exciting components
This book features cool new modules that will meet every Web site’s need, both commercial and personal. With DotNetNuke For Dummies, you’ll get up to speed with this wonderful online tool and create your own corner of the World Wide Web!
Table of Contents:
Introduction.Part I: Drawing from the DotNetNuke Power Source.
Chapter 1: Maximize Your Web Potential.
Chapter 2: Installing DotNetNuke.
Chapter 3: Set It and Forget It: Default Portal Settings.
Part II: Putting the Power of DotNetNuke to Work.
Chapter 4: Getting Your Site Started on the Right Foot.
Chapter 5: Delivering Content Right Out of the Box.
Chapter 6: Adding Bells and Whistles to Your Site.
Part III: Jumping to Light Speed with DotNetNuke.
Chapter 7: Getting Interactive with DotNetNuke.
Chapter 8: Collaborating and Selling with DNN.
Part IV: Getting Under the Hood.
Chapter 9: Standard Stuff You Can Customize.
Chapter 10: Keeping Tabs with the Site Log and Log Viewer.
Chapter 11: Customizing the Look of Your Site with Components.
Part V: The Part of Tens.
Chapter 12: Ten Commercial Modules Worth a Look.
Chapter 13: Ten Free (Or Really Cheap) Modules You Shouldn’t Pass Up.
Chapter 14: Ten Fun Things for Your Forum Users.
Index.
Interesting textbook: Foods That Combat Heart Disease or Low Fat No Fat Vegetarian
Wicked Cool Shell Scripts: 101 Scripts for Linux, Mac OS X, and UNIX Systems
Author: Dave Taylor
Fun and functional Linux, Mac OS X and UNIX shell scripts
The UNIX shell is the main scripting environment of every Linux, Mac OS X and UNIX system, whether a rescued laptop or a million-dollar mainframe. This cookbook of useful, customizable, and fun scripts gives you the tools to solve common Linux, Mac OS X and UNIX problems and personalize your computing environment. Among the more than 100 scripts included are an interactive calculator, a spell checker, a disk backup utility, a weather tracker, and a web logfile analysis tool. The book also teaches you how to write your own sophisticated shell scripts by explaining the syntax and techniques used to build each example scripts. Examples are written in Bourne Shell (sh) syntax.
Slashdot.org
This incredibly fun book (really!), written by Dave Taylor, a veteran UNIX, Solaris and Mac OS X author, is chock full of 101 scripts to customize the UNIX (Bourne) shell. ... Sysadmins and webmasters will find this book fundamentally critical to day-to-day operations; there are dozens of invaluable, customizable scripts highlighted in this book to enable professionals to save time and add simple, elegant solutions to annoying issues in their work environment. User account management, rotating log files, cron scripts, web page tweaks, apache passwords, synchronizing via ftp, etc. are all eminently useful and tweakable.
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