Howard Dresner, "The Performance Management Revolution: Business Results Through Insight and Action"
English | ISBN: 0470124830 | 2007 | 256 pages | PDF | 1392 KB
The Performance Management Revolution shows you how your business can get prepared for the future―transforming strategies into plans, plans into actions, and actions into results. Written by Howard Dresner, a worldwide authority in the area of business intelligence and performance management, this lucid book offers great insight into strategies that any company interested in improving its business performance and accountability could adopt. This visionary book provides an intelligent framework toward the path to better performance through insight and action.
The Official Raspberry Pi Beginner's Guide 2020: How to use your new computer
by Gareth Halfacree
English | 2020 | ISBN: 191204773X | 248 Pages | PDF True | 34 MB
Malba Tahan, "The Man Who Counted: A Collection of Mathematical Adventures"
English | ISBN: 0393351475 | 2015 | 256 pages | EPUB | 6 MB
"A great storyteller."―Paulo Coelho, author of The Alchemist
Sean B. Carroll, "The Making of the Fittest: DNA and the Ultimate Forensic Record of Evolution"
English | ISBN: 0393330516 | 2007 | 304 pages | MOBI | 3 MB
DNA evidence not only solves crimes―in Sean Carroll's hands it will now end the Evolution Wars.
Ben Wilson, George Cruickshank, "The Laughter of Triumph: William Hone and the Fight for the Free Press by Ben Wilson"
English | 2005 | ISBN: 0571224709 | 656 pages | EPUB | 11 MB
William Hone is the forgotten hero of the British Press. In 1817 he was compelled to defend himself against a government determined to enforce censorship. His fellow journalists, opposition MPs and the ministers believed that a verdict against Hone would silence all critical voices. It was a show trial, and Hone - a self-educated and obscure Fleet Street journalist who had to defend himself against the Lord Chief Justice and the Attorney General and in front of a jury hand-picked by the ministry - was the underdog, a supposedly easy victim for the state. Hone's crime was ridiculing the government. He was a noted satirist, who used laughter as a weapon to destroy censorship. His humour captured the imagination of the public; his satires sold in the hundreds of thousands. They were symbols of resistance for an angry public and were genuinely feared by his enemies. The Laughter of Triumph looks at the history of the struggle for free expression against repressive laws through the life of William Hone. Could the state push the law so far that humour was a crime? Or was it the only way to subvert censorship? As Hone implored his jury on the second day of his trials, 'Is a laugh treason? Surely not.'
David Hume, "The History of England (Vol. 1-6): Illustrated Edition"
English | 2019 | ASIN: B07QD9N32S | 2587 pages | EPUB | 3.4 MB
The History of England is David Hume's great work on the history of England, which he wrote in while he was librarian to the Faculty of Advocates in Edinburgh. It was published in six volumes. The History spanned "from the invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution of 1688" and went through over 100 editions.
Jeff Rubin, "The End of Growth"
English | 2012 | ISBN: 030736089X | 304 pages | EPUB | 2.2 MB
In an urgent follow-up to his best-selling Why Your World Is About To Get A Whole Lot Smaller, Jeff Rubin argues that the end of cheap oil means the end of growth. What it will be like to live in a world where growth is over?
Graham Robb, "The Discovery of France: A Historical Geography"
English | ISBN: 0393333647 | 2008 | 496 pages | MOBI | 2 MB
"A witty, engaging narrative style...[Robb's] approach is particularly engrossing." ―New York Times Book Review
The Dinner Party: An Erotic Adventure (Lesbian Voyeur Erotica) by Victoria Rush
English | 2018 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B07G5LYPYJ | 63 pages | PDF | 0.97 Mb
Everyone's an exhibitionist in disguise...
John A. Long, "The Dawn of the Deed: The Prehistoric Origins of Sex"
English | 2012 | ISBN: 0226492540, 022614349X | 296 pages | EPUB | 6.3 MB
We all know about the birds and the bees, but what about the ancient placoderm fishes and the dinosaurs? The history of sex is as old as life itself-and as complicated and mysterious. And despite centuries of study there is always more to know. In 2008, paleontologist John A. Long and a team of researchers revealed their discovery of a placoderm fish fossil, known as "the mother fish," which at 380 million years old revealed the oldest vertebrate embryo-the earliest known example of internal fertilization. As Long explains, this find led to the reexamination of countless fish fossils and the discovery of previously undetected embryos. As a result, placoderms are now considered to be the first species to have had intimate sexual reproduction or sex as we know it-sort of.