The Nanny Express


A young woman goes to work as a nanny for a widower whose two kids have already run off six other nannies. Slowly, the manâ??s young son warms to the new nanny, and the dad himself starts to fall for her as well, but his teenage daughter, still hurting over the death of her mother, has no interest in having this new woman in her or her dadâ??s life.
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Christmas at Water’s Edge


For spoiled, wealthy college girl Layla Turner (Keshia Knight Pulliam, Beauty Shop, TV’s The Cosby Show), Christmas usually means designer wrapping paper and holiday gift bags from Bloomingdale’s. But this year, Layla will learn the true meaning of the season when an unlikely angel in disguise (Pooch Hall, Hood of Horror, TV’s The Game) arrives with a very special mission: to turn this pampered brat into a caring young woman! Don’t miss this unforgettable modern-day Christmas Carol – a coming-of-age story full of heart and soul. Also stars Emmy nominee Tom Bosley (TV’s Happy Days, Murder, She Wrote), Earl Billings (Thank You for Smoking, Antwone Fisher) and Richard Lawson (Guess Who, How Stella Got Her Groove Back).
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What About Your Friends – Weekend Get-Away


This coming of age drama explores teen angst and friendship from a multi-cultural perspective as three high school girls, who are best friends from different social levels, spend a weekend at a college campus competing for three coveted college scholarships. As the weekend away from their parents unfolds and the competitions in their respective subjects intensifies, upscale and sophisticated Temple (Knight Pulliam), middle class and rebellious Alex (Conwell), and the straight-laced and from modest means Breena (McSwain) negotiate the pressures and pitfalls of adolescence. They struggle to maintain their close bond while learning they must take responsibility for their actions. Starring: Keshia Knight Pulliam, Monica McSwain, Alexis Fields, DJ Quik, Ella Joyce.
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Masters of American Music: Thelonius Monk – American Composer

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Cutting Room


Things go from bad to worse when life imitates (bad) art on the set of Curse of the Killer , a new film by B-movie extraordinaire, Charles Drake (Weetus Cren). The movie about a serial killer falls into full disarray when people involved in the production start getting killed one by one in nasty ways. Desperately trying to keep the production afloat along with his cranky casting director (E.G. Daily) and inexperienced writer/director (Mark Elias), paranoia and utter confusion sets in with Charles and crew. A stubborn the show must go on mentality drives the situation into further pandemonium
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Bioinformatics Software Engineering: Delivering Effective Applications


Bioinformatics Software Engineering: Delivering Effective Applications will be useful to anyone who wants to understand how successful software can be developed in a rapidly changing environment.

A handbook, not a textbook, it is not tied to any particular operating system, platform, language, or methodology. Instead it focuses on principles and practices that have been proven in the real world. It is pragmatic, emphasizing the importance of what the author calls Adaptive Programming – doing what works in your situation, and it is concise, covering the whole software development lifecycle in one slim volume.

At each stage, it describes common pitfalls, explains how these can be avoided, and suggests simple techniques which make it easier to deliver better solutions.

“Well thought-out … addresses many of the key issues facing developers of bioinformatics software.”  (Simon Dear, Director, UK Technology and Development, Bioinformatics Engineering and Integration, Genetics Research, GlaxoSmithKline)

Here are some examples from the book itself. 

On software development:

â??Writing software properly involves talking to people â?? often lots of people â?? and plenty of non-coding work on your part.  It requires the ability to dream up new solutions to problems so complicated that they are hard to describe.â?

From description to specification:

â??Look for verbs â?? action words, such as â??doesâ??, â??isâ?? and â??viewsâ??.  Identify nouns â?? naming words, like â??userâ??, â??homeâ?? and â??sequenceâ??.  List the adjectives â?? describing words, for example â??quickâ??, â??simpleâ?? or â??preciseâ??.

The verbs are the functions that must be provided by your application.  The nouns define the parameters to those functions, and the adjectives specify the constraint conditions under which your program must operate.�

On how to start writing software:

â??Handle errors.  Take in data.  Show output.  Get going!â?

On testing:

â??It may not be physically possible to test every potential combination of situations that could occur as users interact with a program.  But one thing that can be done is to test an application at the agreed extremes of its capability: the maximum number of simultaneous users it has to support, the minimum system configuration it must run on, the lowest communication speed it must cope with, and the most complex operations it must perform.

If your program can cope with conditions at the edge of its performance envelope, it is less likely to encounter difficulties in dealing with less challenging situations.�

On showing early versions of software to users:

â??It can be hard explaining the software development process to people who are unfamiliar with it.  Code that to you is nearly finished is simply not working to them, and seeing their dream in bits on the workbench can be disappointing to customers, especially when they were expecting to be able to take it for a test drive.â?

On bugs:

â??If your users find a genuinely reproducible bug in production code, apologize, fix it fast, and then fix the system that allowed it through.  And tell your customers what you are doing, and why, so they will be confident that it will not happen again.  Everybody makes mistakes.  Donâ??t make the same ones twice.â?

And one last thought on successful software development:

“You have to be a detective, following up clues and examining evidence to discover what has gone wrong and why. And you have to be a politician, understanding what people want, both in public and in private, and how this is likely to affect what you are trying to do.  This book cannot teach you how to do all of that, but it can help.”
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