I'm happy to announce that I am now, or soon will be (October 1st) fully employed! This tragically brings an end to my very tough life of working 3 hours a day four hours a week, but will definitely allow me to accomplish more.


I will be working for Marco Tabini & Associates taking care of corporate training (live online training and classroom situations) and community development as a full time contractor. I've been doing the online training for the past eight months or so, so this is nothing new for me. Community Development was a central part of my role back when I worked with the now defunct eDonkey, so this will provide an excellent fit.


I'm looking forward to continuing to grow in this role by enriching the student and community experience.


My friend Charlotta has a blog! It's in Swedish so you probably have no idea what it says, but either do I so all is well!


Just a quick post, I’ve got a lot of neat projects going on in the background, and hopefully a good announcement in the next week or two, but in the meantime...


I’m presently attending the aforementioned summit at Microsoft at their main campus. The summit/conference seems to be centered around them telling us (lots of open source type people, and a decent center on PHP people) what they’re up to with Atlas, IIS, ASP.NET and such, and asking us what they can be doing better.


Pretty interesting so far, some good points about what they’re up to (a lot of their new products seem pretty cool). Depending on the presentation there’s been varying amounts of interaction with the audience, which seems a shame there’s a serious group of people here (when I attend conferences like PHP|Works or PHP|Tek I’m one of like 10-20 speakers. Here there’s 20+ people, all of whom it seems have written at least one book, which is probably selling better than mine, along with some serious name recognition).


Tommorow we get to tour the company store, ooh, ahh. :-)

Reviews, Links & Love I know About:


Godbit Project: http://godbit.com/article/web-apis-with-php

OracleHome.co.uk: http://www.oraclehome.co.uk/web-apis-with-php-book-review-0764589547.htm

Chris Shiflett: http://shiflett.org/archive/257

Amy Hoy: http://slash7.publishwithimpunity.com/2006/9/8/metric-baby-yeah

Ed Finkler: http://funkatron.com/wp/archives/general/paul-reinheimer-will-fuck-you-up-and-steal-your-woman/

PHPDeveloper: http://www.phpdeveloper.org/news/6157

Terry Chay: http://terrychay.com/blog/article/web-apis-with-php.shtml

Joey deVilla : http://www.tucowsblog.com/blog/_archives/2006/9/15/2330447.html


If you know of any other reviews out there, please let me know.


No Starch Press was kind enough to send me a review copy of this book when I asked for another book that hasn't been released yet (I seem to be asking for unreleased titles with increasing frequency), it arrived last week, I finished it today.


I'll get this out of the way up front; I approached this book with a completely inaccurate perception of what it was going to give me. I would consider myself an intermediate to advanced php developer, and I was hoping this book would teach me awesome ways to use PHP5's OOP power to make my applications better, faster, and more attractive to women. That wasn't what this book does. This book introduces OOP, explains why it's useful, and goes through to develop several sample applications to demonstrate OOPs power, and more importantly how to use it.


The books pretty thin (compared to the weighty tomes currently bending my bookshelf) weighing in at 216 pages, split up amongst 15 chapters. The first bit of the book concentrates on explaining what OOP is, why PHP needs it, and why you want it. It then moves on to explain why OOP sucked in PHP4, what works better in PHP5, and all the fancy new words you're going to need to memorize to use it (protected, private, etc.). It then moves on to develop a sample indexing application, adding in thumbnail generation as the book progresses. Later on more advanced topics like design patterns, interfaces and exceptions are introduced. Finally the book gives a brief introduction to SPL which was introduced in PHP5 and improved in PHP5.1.


I have two technical complaints with this book, well one really the other one's just false advertising. First, it annoyed the heck out of me when the typeface and font-size changes midway through a paragraph, this only happens with the intro paragraph, but it still bugged me. Second the back cover advertises that they have sexy new technology that keeps your book from flapping closed when you leave it open on your desk, my desk appears to be incompatible.


Overall I would recommend this book to beginner PHP developers, or intermediate developers who have not yet gotten their feet wet with OO.



Details:

Cost: $29.95 (list price)

Type: Trade cover (paperback)

Length: 216 pages, 15 chapters

Buy from Amazon: Object-Oriented PHP ($18.87)

Hi, I’m Paul Reinheimer, a developer working on the web.

I co-founded WonderProxy which provides access to over 200 proxies around the world to enable testing of geoip sensitive applications. We've since expanded to offer more granular tooling through Where's it Up

My hobbies are cycling, photography, travel, and engaging Allison Moore in intelligent discourse. I frequently write about PHP and other related technologies.

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