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A Practical Guide to Protecting Code
This book is a guide to the legal system-without the legalese. From trade secrets to open source, this book offers a clear and understandable approach to intellectual property issues from a developer's point of view. Browse the book.
Clear, correct, and deep, this is a welcome addition to discussions of law and computing for anyone -- even lawyers!
-- Lawrence Lessig, law professor at Stanford Law School, founder of the Stanford Center for Internet and Society
Books
Bestselling
The Ruby Programming Language
By
David Flanagan
,
Yukihiro Matsumoto
[January 2008]
RESTful Web Services
By
Leonard Richardson
,
Sam Ruby
[May 2007]
Learning Rails
By
Simon St. Laurent
,
Edd Dumbill
[November 2008]
Head First Rails
By
David Griffiths
[December 2008]
Ruby Pocket Reference
By
Michael Fitzgerald
[July 2007]
New
Head First Rails
By
David Griffiths
[December 2008]
Wicked Cool Ruby Scripts
By
Steve Pugh
[November 2008]
Learning Rails
By
Simon St. Laurent
,
Edd Dumbill
[November 2008]
Enterprise Recipes with Ruby and Rails
By
Maik Schmidt
[November 2008]
Enterprise Rails
By
Dan Chak
[October 2008]
Upcoming
Learn to Program, Second Edition
By
Chris Pine
[January 2009]
Programming Ruby 1.9
By
Dave Thomas
[March 2009]
RubyCocoa
By
Brian Marick
[April 2009]
Authors
Gregory T. Brown
Gregory T. Brown is a New Haven, CT based Rubyist who spends most of his time on free software projects in Ruby. He is the original author of Ruby Reports.
Chris Pine
Chris Pine first discovered the programming language Ruby in early 2001 and immediately began using it to build tools for his day job: programming computer games.
Brian P. Hogan
Brian P. Hogan Brian Hogan has been developing web sites professionally since 1995 as a freelancer and consultant. He's also built small and large web sites and web applications using ASP, PHP, and Ruby on Rails.
Tony Hillerson
Tony Hillerson is a Software Architect for EffectiveUI. He graduated from Ambassador University with a BA in MIS. On any given day he may be working with Flex, Java, Rails, Maven, Ant, Ruby, or shell scripts. Tony has contributed to many community projects...
Articles & Blogs
Rubyist Pat Eyler Interviews Ruby Best Practises Author Gregory Brown - ...
By Sara Peyton
[January 14, 2009]
Ruby aficionado Pat Eyler is conducting a series of wonderful interviews with Gregory Brown, the author of O'Reilly's upcoming Ruby Best Practices (currently in Rough Cuts). Based in New Haven, CT, Gregory has been a GSoC student and mentor, as well as the Ruby Mendicant. In the wide ranging two-part interview, Gregory discusses Ruby, mocking, and why he decided to write "Ruby Best Practices."
Creating Custom SOAP Requests with Ruby and Net::HTTP - O'Reilly Broadcast
By Eric Berry
[December 19, 2008]
Learn to create a custom SOAP request using Ruby and Net::HTTP
A Conversation with the Authors of JRuby Cookbook - O'Reilly Broadcast
By Timothy M. O'Brien
[November 25, 2008]
Henry Liu and Justin Edelson authors of the just released JRuby Cookbook talk about JRuby, the current state of the Java platform, and some of the compelling benefits of integrating a language like Ruby with the Java platform.
The Ever-Dynamic John Lam on Iron Ruby, Open Source and Microsoft - ...
By James Turner
[September 29, 2008]
John Lam, who heads the Iron Ruby effort at Microsoft, stopped by to tell O'Reilly News all the exciting work going on with dynamic languages at Redmond. John spent some time discussing what makes a language dynamic, what the benefits of dynamic languages are, and how Microsoft is trying to leverage the power of lanaguages such as Ruby inside their CLR framework.
The Present and Future of Ruby and Rails - O'Reilly Broadcast
By chromatic
[September 22, 2008]
Chad Fowler and Rich Kilmer discuss where Ruby and Rails have gone in the past year, whether RESTful composition obviates the need for ORM, what's interesting in the upcoming world of Ruby and Rails, and how Maglev, Rubinius, and other new Ruby implementations contribute to the world of dynamic languages.
XSpec - O'Reilly Broadcast
By Jeni Tennison
[September 07, 2008]
A while ago I put together a framework for unit testing XSLT. Iâve been using that for a couple of years and itâs been OK, but then I started playing with Ruby on Rails, and testing with RSpec: a framework...
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