Tips, Tricks & Hacks for OS X

davidkaneda:

A lot of my friends, colleagues, and flat-out heros have released some excellent books recently. I’ve mentioned a few of them, but I think it would be fun to run a giveaway and help spread some of this fine knowledge around the community. Here are the books I am giving away:

  1. Building iPhone Apps with HTML, CSS, and Javascript, Jonathan Stark
    An excellent introduction to creating web applications on the iPhone. I’ve watched this book grow over the past few months and I can say with confidence that it’s ready to become a definitive reference for creating iPhone web apps. In addition to covering the basics, the book also includes a full chapter on jQTouch, my jQuery plugin for iPhone development.
  2. Designing With Web Standards, Jeffrey Zeldman
    For anyone getting into web development, Zeldman’s DWWS continues to serve as the ultimate introduction to web standards and best practices. I’ve trained a fair amount of budding designers, and this book is always first on my “required reading” list. Now in it’s third edition, the book continues to stay fresh and relevant.
  3. Mobile Design and Development, Brian Fling
    Brian’s a good friend of mine and colleague at pinch/zoom. His presentations on mobile design are beautiful, informative, and comprehensive. This book promises to be a wealth of insight into mobile design practices and industry trends.
  4. Crush It, Gary Vaynerchuk
    For anyone who hasn’t had the benefit of seeing Gary speak live, he is the creator of Wine Library TV and one of the most inspirational speakers on social media around. Crush It is not just about doing what you love and making great money while doing it, but shows just how accessible success is in today’s web culture.
  5. Rework, 37Signals
    Readers of this blog will note: 37Signals is one of my favorite companies around—it is an overwhelming business success built on principles like communicating clearly and charging for value. Their previous book, Getting Real, remains the authoritative guide on building web apps. This one, set to release early next year, will speak purely to business management—and will doubtlessly be full of exceptional advice.

To participate, just leave a reply below with the number corresponding to the book you want most, a quick note about what type of content you’d like to see more of on this blog, and your Twitter username. I’ll select winners randomly at the end of the week. Also, make sure you’re following me on Twitter so I can DM the details to the winners.

So, which book would you like?

  1. justinlowery answered: 4 or 5. I like what you’re posting now, maybe even more tech opinion & commentary. Keep up the great work!
  2. esbueno answered: 1|Just found your blog, love it all so far|motherfuton
  3. davidhoffman answered: #2. Would love to see more about your personal process. @dodeca
  4. trmw answered: #5 please! This might seem like a copout, but I honestly think the mix of topics on the blogs is peferct as is. @trmw
  5. ginandjesus answered: #2, would love to see more things about web development, favorite resources & references, typefaces, icons, etc. - twitter: brandonsadkins
  6. elyk answered: 3 More mobile design stuff would be great, otherwise keep on carrying on, thanks. @shiningchrome
  7. talby answered: 5 and i’ve really liked your going in depth about a particular new feature in webkit or whatever. @Koalemos
  8. johnburke answered: #1, #2 or #5 would be awesome!!!! @johnburke
  9. klickhere answered: 5: Rework, and perhaps more design that isn’t flat/2d or digital, but haptic and in the physical world as well. ariklick Thanks!
  10. ringer-rg answered: Rework, 37Signals, please
  11. davidharthcock answered: #1 posting about food that inspires your development/design process (@iheartfood)
  12. adrian answered: #1 pretty please - I would love to see more geeky code examples of doing stuff in jQTouch to provide inspiration and ideas of what’s possible
  13. boruburns answered: #2. I’d like to see you showcase designers who inspire you (maybe on a weekly basis). @mrbrianburns
  14. madhandsome answered: computer says NO!
  15. timriley answered: #4. I’d love more about business. The technology I know how to learn, the business is the part that still seems magical. @timriley
  16. amotion answered: #3 - I’d like to see more posts on how you guys work at Morfunk (process, etc). The Outpost spec doc was insightful! @amotion
  17. petvetrecs answered: 1 @petvetrecs preferably signed :)
  18. hammocknotes answered: #4….. or #5. @HammockNotes. Great idea! More book reviews about tech stuff. Not enough ~user~ reviews out there, imho.
  19. macknik answered: #1 since I’d love to learn more about jQTouch. @macknik. Your blog needs more kittens in mittens!
  20. dontmsgme answered: #5 :) @brocore
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