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How to Persuade People Who Don't Want to be Persuaded: Get What You Want-Every Time!
How to Persuade People Who Don't Want to be Persuaded: Get What You Want-Every Time!
If you’re in business, you’re selling something–a product, an opinion, a new way of doing things. The truth is, even if you don’t think of yourself as a pitchman, you might as well be one. This powerful guide to ethical influence shows you how to use effective persuasion techniques to get what you want the right...
Photoshop for Right-Brainers: The Art of Photo Manipulation
Photoshop for Right-Brainers: The Art of Photo Manipulation
Attention Right-Brainers!

You're an artistic visionary, right? In your head you imagine clever image fixes, fanciful photo manipulations, and artworks of startling genius. But when it comes to bringing these visions to life on your computer -- well, that’s the hard part. If this sounds
...
101 Outer Space Projects for the Evil Genius
101 Outer Space Projects for the Evil Genius
Before I became a world-famous nonfiction author (no, really, this guy in Hong Kong knows me and he thinks I’m pretty good at what I do), I tried my typewriter at spinning fictional yarns. Lucky for me (and you) this creative writing venture didn’t pan out.

During this short “fictional” period of my life, I wrote
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The Physics of Superheroes
The Physics of Superheroes
If superheroes stepped off the comic book page or silver screen and into reality, could they actually work their wonders in a world constrained by the laws of physics? How strong would Superman have to be to “leap tall buildings in a single bound”? Could Storm of the X-Men possibly control the weather? And how many cheeseburgers would...
Erdos on Graphs : His Legacy of Unsolved Problems
Erdos on Graphs : His Legacy of Unsolved Problems
A tribute to Paul Erdos, the wandering mathematician once described as the prince of problem solvers & the absolute monarch of problem posers, examines within the context of his personality & lifestyle the legacy of open problems he left to the world of mathematics after his death in 1996. DLC: Graph theory.

There is no
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Charles Darwin and The Origin of Species (Greenwood Guides to Historic Events 1500-1900)
Charles Darwin and The Origin of Species (Greenwood Guides to Historic Events 1500-1900)

In 1985, the Italian scientist Antonella La Vergata remarked that the ‘‘Darwin’s-place-in-history approach’’ dominated writing about Darwin and the development of the theory of evolution before 1960. Darwin was the colossus who stood above every other scientist in the nineteenth century when it came to developing...

Visual Basic 2008 For Dummies (Computer/Tech)
Visual Basic 2008 For Dummies (Computer/Tech)
Visual Basic is a favorite programming language, so if you’re new to programming, it’s a great place to start. Visual Basic 2008 For Dummies is the fun and easy way to begin creating applications right away while you get the hang of using the Visual Studio environment. Soon you’ll be building all sorts of useful stuff...
The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry
The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry
What do the music of J. S. Bach, the basic forces of nature, Rubik's Cube, and the selection of mates have in common? They are all characterized by certain symmetries. Symmetry is the concept that bridges the gap between science and art, between the world of theoretical physics and the everyday world we see around us. Yet the "language"...
Thomas Hardy's 'Poetical Matter' Notebook
Thomas Hardy's 'Poetical Matter' Notebook
...the notebook offers a rich and vivid demonstration of the ways in which Hardy, astonishingly creative even into his mid-80s, worked persistently with ideas towards so many of the poems which were gathered into the remarkable final volume, Winter Words. With particular value from a biographical standpoint, we can catch tantalising glimpses of the...
You Are a Mathematician: A Wise and Witty Introduction to the Joy of Numbers
You Are a Mathematician: A Wise and Witty Introduction to the Joy of Numbers

What is the largest number less than 1?

If x and y are any of two different positive numbers, which is larger, x2 + y2 or 2xy?

What do you get if you cross a cube and an octahedron?

Discover the surprising answers as David Wells conclusively proves that: you Are a mathematician

Praise for David Wells's

The...

Twitter Tips, Tricks, and Tweets
Twitter Tips, Tricks, and Tweets
If you’re one of the millions of users joining Twitter to connect to friends, family, and interest groups; or to follow the conversation and find out what’s happening beyond your doorstep, then this full color, 288 page book is for you. Coverage on how to establish a Twitter account, tweet from mobile devices, search for people and...
Ancient Engineers' Inventions: Precursors of the Present (History of Mechanism and Machine Science)
Ancient Engineers' Inventions: Precursors of the Present (History of Mechanism and Machine Science)
This book describes inventions and designs of ancient engineers that are the precursors of the present. The ages mainly range from 300 B.C. to 1600 A.D. with some exceptions from before and after this period.

As for the very ancient ones, the book describes inventions (documented by archaeological finds mainly from Pompei, Ercolano and Stabia)...

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