Talk:O'Reilly Media/Archives/2015

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List of books

Wondering about the list of books - it would get unwieldy if it had *every* O'Reilly book there. I added a representative sample, i.e. the ones I own :) There should probablary be a Perl and a Missing Manual in there to be more representative, but I'm not sure which to pick... Kirun 20:09 Apr 26, 2003 (UTC)

I would suggest including Sed & Awk as that is a very popular book amongst Unix/Linux administrators and programmers, a mention of the "Nutshell" series of books (eg. Java in a Nutshell), the JavaScript Definitive Guide (aka the Rhino book - in fact Mozilla's JavaScript interpreter is called Rhino in homage) and every network admin's favourite book: DNS & BIND. I wouldn't say either the Mozilla Applications or the PostgreSQL books were anywhere near as popular. --195.8.190.39 13:24, 11 Oct 2004 (UTC)

How about making the list a little more complete? It doesn't need to include every title, but right now it's a little sparse and sporadic. Oreilly's website lists all of their books by popularity, which could be a good starting point for which ones to show here. 98.210.104.178 (talk) 08:13, 1 February 2010 (UTC)

O'Reilly now has a new logo: oreilly.com. Wikipage should be updated. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.83.167.1 (talk) 12:50, 4 November 2013 (UTC)

Why the animal covers?

Maybe the article could include an explanation of why they started putting random animals on the cover of that one series of books.

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First book "about the web" only includes one chapter about the web?

Perhaps the author of this fact is confusing the internet with the web (a subset of the internet)? If the author is not confused, then I'd say the following statement is somewhat confusing: "In 1992, when there were only 200 web sites, O'Reilly Media published the first book about the web[citation needed], devoting a whole chapter to it, in Ed Krol's groundbreaking Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog (1992)." —Preceding unsigned comment added by 151.204.159.37 (talk) 20:14, 3 January 2009 (UTC)

DRM ?

Not a single word about DRM, or rather that their eBooks are DRM free?--Cyberman TM (talk) 18:50, 27 September 2011 (UTC)