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Dmitry Zinoviev is an Associate Professor of Computer Science. He holds PhD in Computer Science from State University of New York at Stony Brook (SUNY). His research interests include simulation and modeling, networks, and social informatics.
Prof. Zinoviev is currently with the department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Suffolk University, Boston.
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Print: $20.95 Download: $6.25 This book is an introduction to social informatics. "Can they steal my identity?" - "What does it mean encryption?" - "How do Web chats work?" - "What is a virus?" - "Who's spying on my computer?" - These and many other questions are becoming important and sometimes vitally important for people who thought they had nothing to do with the computing profession. As computers and other computing devices penetrate deeper and deeper into our everyday life, we become more and more dependent on them. The purpose of this book is to show what's "running under the hood" of a computer and a computer network, where are the threats coming from, how to avoid them, and how the advent of computers and networks is changing our society.
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Hardcover Print: $25.87 The purpose of this book is to provide an overview of Computer Programming for an inexperienced audience, using Python - an easy, popular, and powerful programming language. The emphasis of the book is not on the language itself, but on the way computer programmers think when they are dealing with their (and our) problems.
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Print: $12.14 Download: $2.99 The purpose of this book is to provide an overview of Computer Programming for an inexperienced audience, using Python - an easy, popular, and powerful programming language. The emphasis of the book is not on the language itself, but on the way computer programmers think when they are dealing with their (and our) problems.
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Print: $6.34 Download: $0.99 A dictionary of Russian railway slang -- almost 700 entries. In Russian.
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Print: $14.03 Download: $1.25 The book you are about to enjoy is a reprint collection of maps of the railways and riverways of the USSR. The atlas was originally published in 1943, in the middle of WWII. The maps in the atlas are mostly actual as of year 1941, although some later constructed lines are also shown. The original book was designated as "Dlya Sluzhebnogo Pol'zovaniya," which means "For official use only." The maps show all hub and major non-hub stations, number of tracks, track gauges, lines under construction, and administrative boundaries.
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Print: $13.04 Download: $5.00 The purpose of this book is to provide a simple yet profound introduction to the art of computer programming for an inexperienced audience, using Python -- an easy, popular, and powerful scripting
programming language. It is an attempt to close the gap between two relatively disjoint communities and two respective classes of books:
the community of novice programmers desperately struggling with their first C, C++ or
Java programs, and the community of computer
professionals and hackers using Python for their "bread and butter." Because of this deep division, most of the books for novices do not cover Python, while most (if not all) Python books for professionals are not introductory and cannot be recommended to non-programmers.
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Download: $6.25 Art Print: $13.70 Thsi comprehensive map of Russian, C.I.S., and Baltic railways show all lines, major stations, and railway division boundaries. For each line the number of tracks, electrification type, and traffic type is shown. The map is in Russian.
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