Staples stores accept big stuff, like computers, for $10, and small stuff, like batteries and cell phones, for free. I've done this for a few months now. Check on the staples.com website.
I was thinking Tomcat: The Definitive Guide, but I like another poster's idea of a Jakarta book even better, as I am currently using Tomcat *and* other jakarta technologies (such as the ORO regexp stuff) on my latest project. So, a Jakarta book would rock.
Sadly, all content management systems suck, and they're taking over my field (web site development) so at least OpenCMS: The Definitive Guide would legitimise an open source content management system, and divert *some* attention away from Vignette, OpenMarket, and the other sucky CMSs of the world.
Staples stores accept big stuff, like computers, for $10, and small stuff, like batteries and cell phones, for free. I've done this for a few months now. Check on the staples.com website.
For many (most?) needs, iBATIS is actually better. It does SQL mapping instead of O/R mapping.
I was thinking Tomcat: The Definitive Guide, but I like another poster's idea of a Jakarta book even better, as I am currently using Tomcat *and* other jakarta technologies (such as the ORO regexp stuff) on my latest project. So, a Jakarta book would rock.
Sadly, all content management systems suck, and they're taking over my field (web site development) so at least OpenCMS: The Definitive Guide would legitimise an open source content management system, and divert *some* attention away from Vignette, OpenMarket, and the other sucky CMSs of the world.