Windows XP All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies (For Dummies (Computer/Tech)) By Woody Leonhard


Product Description

Windows is the number one operating system in the world. There’s a lot to Windows XP, with office productivity applications, multimedia features, the Internet, and security upgrades. Now and then, you probably wish you could call Tech Support.

That’s when you’ll be grateful to have nine books about Windows XP in one — Windows XP All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies, Second Edition. It replaces a whole shelf of reference books and covers
Windows XP basics
Customization
The Internet
Internet Explorer
Microsoft Network
Hardware
Multimedia
Windows Media Center
Wired and wireless networks

Fully updated with the latest information on Microsoft’s improved security features, the newest on multimedia applications and Windows Media Center, and plenty of additional stuff to help you decide about broadband Internet connections, this edition of Windows XP All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies makes Windows XP manageable. It helps you
Get started with Windows XP, search for files, use shortcuts, deal with common problems, and take advantage of built-in help
Customize your desktop, menus, icons, and startup programs
Protect your PC by using Windows Firewall, appropriate virus protection, and other security measures
Compare browsers, connect to the Internet, choose the right e-mail program, and manage newsgroups and chats
Work with digital images, download and play music, burn CDs, find out about digital camcorders, and create movies with Movie Maker
Decide whether a Media Center PC is right for you
Create a home network and troubleshoot any problems that come up

With thumbtabs that make it easy to find what you’re looking for and the famous For Dummies cheat sheet in the front, this book is designed to make life with Windows XP a lot easier, happier, safer, and a whole lot more fun.
Product Details
Amazon Sales Rank: #17400 in Books
Published on: 2004-10-22
Number of items: 1
Binding: Paperback
816 pages
Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
The cover of Windows XP All-in-One Desk Reference for Dummies boasts that it's "nine books in one." That's a stretch--it's really a book about Microsoft Windows XP for novices, with supplementary information about America Online and MSN--but cover claims aside, this book represents a good value for someone new to computing. Woody Leonhard--a respected Windows authority who writes with enough humor to keep things light but not so much as to obscure the facts--begins with how to use a mouse and works all the way through installing printers and setting up a little network in a home or small office. Granted, if you've found this page on the Internet you probably don't need Leonhard's "how-to-click" tutorial, but you may be shopping for someone unfamiliar with Windows. This book is good for such people.

While the nine separate indexes (one at the end of each included "book") will annoy you--the unified one at the back of this book is much easier to find and use--Leonhard's style will compensate. He's very good at explaining how to do what Windows XP was meant to do, up to a certain level. Want to add a music file to a Windows Media Player playlist? There's a procedure for that. Want to cancel AOL because you can't stand it? He explains how. He does not, however, provide detail on more complicated jobs like setting up a cable modem or dealing with the specific security risk posed by Universal Plug and Play. Overall, this is a nicely written, friendly book that covers Windows XP well, but to a limited depth. --David Wall

Topics covered: Microsoft Windows XP for home users, particularly novices. Windows XP fundamentals (like windows and the mouse pointer), customization, Internet tools (including Outlook Express and Internet Explorer), America Online (AOL), Microsoft Network (MSN), printers, small networks, and Internet connectivity are all addressed.

Download Description
The ultimate reference for Windows users who have recently upgraded and are looking for a comprehensive guide to installing Windows XP, setting it up, and taking advantage of all of its new features, in addition to anyone who is downloading the new service pack (SP2) or purchasing a new PC
* The nine minibooks include Windows XP basics, customization, the Internet, Internet Explorer, America Online, Microsoft network, hardware, multimedia, and home networking
* This edition covers new security features (including Windows Firewall), the new wireless user interface, Windows Media Player 9, Windows Movie Maker 2, and changes to Internet Explorer
* Includes an entirely new chapter on Windows Media Center
* The new edition also boasts a full chapter devoted to broadband Internet connections, coverage of new of MSN and AOL versions, and expanded coverage of wireless networking and wireless security

Book Info
Covers absolutely everything you need to know about Windows XP. Packed with exclusive troubleshooting tips. Softcover.
Customer Reviews

Why You Should Buy It, and Why You Should Skip It
This is a solid effort and about 750 pages long and close to the limit of what you can comfortably read - limited by weight and thickness. The good thing is that author covers all the basic topics on Windows XP and spends a lot of time on the mysteries of peripherals and media. So, in effect he tries to cover every topic of interest from basics such as turning on Windows to movie making and does so all in one thick book. This book is similar to but larger and more up to date than Dan Gookin's "Troubleshooting Your PC" and "Windows XP" by Andy Rathbone. His style is similar to Gookin's, i.e.: humorous or he attempts to be funny. I can live with that, no problem, just ignore it. The non-Windows subject are under 10% and I have no problem with them.

I got a copy, skimmed through it, read three chapters in detail and looked at the rest. I will tell you why I did not buy it. But I give the author his due: it is a solid 5 star effort. The question is more basic and it is whether you want a 750 page book on XP? I say no, and this is my story.

As a reference point, I have a strong technical background in science and engineering and have used all versions of Windows going back for 14 years to Windows 3.1. Overall, I was satisfied with the amount of detailed information in the book. It is aimed at the average user who does not want the details just the basics. It is a quick introduction to the basic recipes or what Microsoft calls Wizards and what everything means at the interface panel and how to use Windows. If you have a problem, which are mostly settings issues with Windows, you can look in the index and there it is. Turn to the page listed, follow the step by step recipe and the problem is solved. That applies to 90% of the Windows users and most Windows problems. If you want a single book on your desk, then buy it.

Before using the book, I received an older computer with Windows XP that had problems. This caused me to stop, fix the problems and look at some of the books on the market. I read the other two books first. By the way, I downloaded all the Windows updates and Service Pack 2. There are over 100 free updates.

The dirty little secret is that you do not need the book to get the information since Microsoft has a huge support effort found on their "Microsoft Help and Support" page. All you have to do is search on that page by typing in your topic and all the information is there or you can do a web search. Not only that, the Microsoft support is current - updated all the time - plus it has the suggested free downloads. To top it off, Microsoft has a guy called Ed Bott who is their Microsoft Press Author and he has written a series of free guides. I have started to collect Bott's articles which have many tips, and of course are free.

In fact, anyone can write this book by simply downloading a pile of the Microsoft Help and Support Pages plus some other files, do an edit (for a few months?) and they have the book. So, I did not buy it because it is free from Microsoft in pieces or available on the web in pieces, and it is more detailed at Microsoft than in the book, plus Microsoft keeps their support current.

So why buy a heavy book, pay $20 plus shipping, or drive to the store and buy a book that will go out of date? Just go to the Microsoft Help and Support web page and type in your topic or problem, and if it is not there do a quick search. It is no more difficult than searching the Index of the present book. It is book versus computer for similar information.

If you must have a basic user book on Windows XP, then the book is good. You get a lot of paper and many recipes all in one spot for $20.

Either Get the Book From the Library or Buy It Used
If you are not familiar with Leonhard's books, you might want to check this book out of the library, or buy it cheaply used. In my opinion, this book is a sad example of a publisher and editors allowing an author's personality to destroy what would have been an excellent reference book.

There is lots of useful information in this book explained very clearly. Yet, to read it all, you must put up with Leonhard's constant adolescent remarks. Or are they "geek" remarks? Or possibly both? Or maybe one and the same? I don't know. I don't inhabit his world, and found it difficult to even visit it for more than a few chapters. Luckily, I got the book from the library. And now I see why there are so many used books by him going so cheaply.

It's strange to see, too, that Amazon is showing reviews for this book that were written before it was even published! Obviously, they are for previous editions. Oh well...it's all been one strange trip anyway...a trip that I, for one, cut short...very, very short. This book is strictly for the author's fans, or for those who inhabit his world.

Not really a reference -- more like a ramble
This book could have used a thorough editing. It is supposed to be a "desk reference," which to me means you can look up information quickly. However, it's hard to find what you're looking for here. The worthwhile information is buried in the everyday stuff that I already knew, so to find what I wanted, I had to wade through many pages of material I was already familiar with.

Take Chapter 2, "Finding Your Way from Start to Finish," for example. It explains very basic stuff such as changing user settings, and then, starting about 40 pages into the chapter where you would least expect it, are instructions for sharing a file on the Internet, a sophisticated task.

I found this book very frustrating. On top of not being able to find instructions I wanted by browsing in the book, I found the index unhelpful.

Finally, I don't understand why the author devoted 65 pages to America Online. Since when is America Online part of Windows XP? The book makes no mention of the Windows Registry.

This book should rightly be called "A Ramble through Windows XP." It is not a reference. It is not a friendly book that you can find information in.

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