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› See all 6 customer reviews... David Parker is the director of bVisual,
office Professional Plus 2010 code, a Microsoft Certified Partner that provides visual software solutions to a wide range of business sectors and situations. Microsoft awarded Parker an MVP for Microsoft Office Visio in 2005. 5 star: (2) 4 star: (2) 3 star:
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› See all 6 customer reviews... James J. Bell (Chamblee,
office 2007 Ultimate activation key, GA United States) - See all my reviews
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I want you to think of the stereo typical college level professor who drones on while writing on the chalk board. Is the professor dumb? Of course not. Does he lack the ability to teach? Yes. This author portrays himself as a user who got tired of depending on IT for meaningful reports. I see this author as a geek's geek. He can quote Visual Basic in his sleep and does so throughout this text. However,
microsoft office 2010 pro 32bit, this author lacks perspective. He thinks we all just take one look at his VB and a 100 watt light bulb pops-up over our heads. And just like a professor he drones on in his book without approaching a subject from a different perspective. If he's so good at Visio - why didn't he include example diagrams? Just to clarify - I have no problem with Visio books going into VB - my problem is when they don't approach the subject from multiple perspectives to reach more hearts and minds. L. Ballas (Portland OR USA) - See all my reviews
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I enjoyed the author's casual conversational tone through much of the book. It had a lot of good info, some of which was valuable if you were sitting at a keyboard and followed along step-by-step. The author provides a download site for the code within the book, which is a nice alternative to those book CDs that always end up lost.
As a reference,
windows 7 ultimate 64bit, the text wasn't perfect. I think it was really designed to be read rather than thumbed through.