

- #ADOBE GOLIVE CLASSROOM IN A BOOK PORTABLE#
- #ADOBE GOLIVE CLASSROOM IN A BOOK PC#
- #ADOBE GOLIVE CLASSROOM IN A BOOK PROFESSIONAL#
- #ADOBE GOLIVE CLASSROOM IN A BOOK SERIES#
Next in line was the defense business, sold to Martin Marietta for three billion dollars. First to go was GE’s electric transformer factory, which was raided, closed, and left to rot.
#ADOBE GOLIVE CLASSROOM IN A BOOK PROFESSIONAL#
Jack started his professional life in my hometown of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, but fond nostalgia didn't stop him from lopping off various parts of the city's industrial apparatus and selling them to the highest bidder. True, that old C64 was becoming more obsolete every day, but two thousand dollars-in early nineties money-was a tough ask for a working-class family like mine, because General Electric CEO and cartoonish supervillain Jack Welch was busy destroying tens of thousands of lives in his ruthless quest for efficiency and profit. Actually replacing the old Commodore was difficult from a financial standpoint despite its growing obsolescence. If you wanted to replace your aging Eighties machine, you could get an IBM compatible, or you could get a Mac, or you could sit back and not complain because there were starving children in other countries who didn't have any computers at all.Īs I mentioned a few episodes back, my family kept a Commodore 64 as our primary computer until nineteen ninety-seven.

#ADOBE GOLIVE CLASSROOM IN A BOOK PC#
Other companies had switched to making their own IBM PC clones… if they hadn't given up on computers entirely.
#ADOBE GOLIVE CLASSROOM IN A BOOK PORTABLE#
Acorn hadn't dropped out of the desktop market just yet, but was finding more success in licensing their ARM architecture for portable devices. Commodore was in a death spiral, and Atari had already crashed and burned. High powered RISC workstations from Sun, Silicon Graphics, IBM, and Hewlett-Packard had completely overtaken the high end of the market. IBM compatibles were number one in home and business computers, with the Macintosh plodding slowly behind them. The unpredictable and chaotic market for personal computers had settled into a respectable groove. Now let's jump forward to 1993, when I was in grade school. In previous episodes, we looked at two pivotal computers from 1983, when I was a baby. At the end of each chapter, review questions wrap up and reinforce what you've learned, and the accompanying CD-ROM gives you customized files and images designed for use in conjunction with the book's hands-on exercises.Welcome back to Computers of Significant History, an analysis of the history of computing in terms of how it affected the life of one writer/podcaster. You'll never feel overwhelmed by the information. The Adobe Creative Team breaks down GoLive and Web publishing into clear, step-by-step lessons that cover key concepts such as toolbars, palettes, layout design, the collaborative Adobe Web WorkGroup Server, site architecture, dynamic content creation, wireless-device authoring, Cascading Style Sheets, image maps, and more. Adobe GoLive 6.0 Classroom in a Book makes it easy to learn what you want to know when you need to know it. And here's something else that sets it apart from the other GoLive books out there: Adobe's Classroom in a Book is the only one that gives you the official training course created by the company's own team and tested in its classrooms and labs.
#ADOBE GOLIVE CLASSROOM IN A BOOK SERIES#
This hands-on workbook leads you through a series of lessons that teach you everything you need to know to quickly get to work with the latest version of GoLive, but you learn on your own time, at your own pace.

When it comes to mastering Adobe GoLive, Adobe GoLive 6.0 Classroom in a Book puts you in a class of your own.
