Tag Archives: documentation

IBM SOA SandBox

SOA Sandbox logoThe IBM® SOA Sandbox lets you increase your SOA skills through practical, hands-on experience with the IBM SOA entry points. These SOA entry points — people, process, information, reuse, and connectivity — are based upon real customer experiences and provide a simple way to get started with SOA. The SOA Sandbox makes it easy to learn about these entry points by providing a low-risk "tinker, test, and try" learning environment that's designed for enterprise architects, integration developers, and Web developers, but available to everyone.

The IBM SOA Sandbox provides a mix of full-version software trials and "try online" hosted environments where you can explore tutorials and get architectural guidance. You'll also find online demos, best practice documentation, and quick-start guides, all integrated into a low-risk, hands-on format that provides practical applications of SOA entry points to accelerate learning.

http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/downloads/soasandbox/

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Get even more out of your NOKIA mobile phone !

Here are a few links that will help you get even more out of your NOKIA mobile phone

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Nokia S40, S60, S80 developer forums

Nokia forums for mobile phone developers

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Darwin Information Typing Architecture (DITA) v1.0

XFCE on the Debian wiki

I thought the help.ubuntu.com wiki was cool until i discovered the debian wiki.

Just take a look at these excellent XFCE wiki entries

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GrokDoc’s usability study of GNU/Linux newbies

GrokDoc's usability study of GNU/Linux newbies goal is to create a useful manual on basic tasks that new users will find simple and clear and easy to follow, using what we learn from our study.

GrokDoc is an offshoot of Groklaw

Our idea is this: instead of technically proficient people explaining tasks and functions to newbies, we let newbies show us what is hard for them. Proprietary software companies do such usability studies, and they benefit from the knowledge gained.

The Free/Open Source community has all that we need to do the same, using the many eyeballs approach, so to speak. Open source ideals applied to research can be very powerful.

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