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Windows XP Home Edition: The Missing Manual (2nd Edition)
 
 
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Windows XP Home Edition: The Missing Manual (2nd Edition) [Paperback]

David Pogue (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (34 customer reviews)

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Book Description

December 23, 2004 059600897X 978-0596008970 Second Edition

Windows XP Home Edition offers dozens of new features for consumers: an elegant user interface, drag-and-drop CD burning, and powerful ways to view and manage digital photos and music, among other features. With the release of Service Pack 2 (SP2), Windows XP now provides better protection against viruses, worms, and malicious hackers. But it still comes without a single page of printed instructions.

Fortunately, the new edition of Windows XP Home Edition: The Missing Manual fills the void. With its wealth of tips, instructions, and expert advice, this comprehensive resource is your ticket to making your time at the computer safer, easier, and more fun. And best of all, it's been updated to include detailed coverage of Service Pack 2.

Written in easy-to-follow, jargon-free language, Windows XP Home Edition: The Missing Manual, Second Edition is perfectly suited for both first-time PC fans and budding power users. And like the rest of the Missing Manual series, it also relies on technical insight, crystal-clear objectivity, and a sense of humor--meaning no one will be left behind.

The book begins with a tour of the Desktop and instructions for customizing the Taskbar and toolbars. It also includes a primer on how to organize files, folders, and windows for maximum efficiency. More advanced chapters explore control panels and built-in applications; walk through configurations like how to set up a PC for Internet use; and address the standard Windows rituals of troubleshooting, installation, and upgrading.

For the height of manageability and control, the book also conveys all the need-to-know information about the security technologies featured in Windows XP SP2, so you can better defend yourself against viruses, worms, and hackers. Readers even receive guidelines and instructions for installing SP2 on their PC, or across a network of computers.

Co-authored by David Pogue, New York Times computer columnist and Missing Manuals creator, this updated guide is the friendly, authoritative book that should have been in the box. It's sure to become your preferred guide whenever you sit down to Windows XP.


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

As the installed base of Microsoft's newest operating system, XP, grows, guides to its use will continue to proliferate (see also Computer Media, LJ 3/1/02). Upgraders with little previous experience will be drawn to 10 Minute Guide, which highlights changes from earlier versions and explains common tasks step by step. Small and leaving no room for background or troubleshooting assistance, this should be purchased in conjunction with more comprehensive guides, such as The Missing Manual. It provides enough background to allow new home users and upgraders to get up and running, while leaving them feeling as if they have a handle on why and how things work. Ample screen shots and sidebars further this process; recommended for all libraries. Headaches, for beginning to intermediate users, focuses on troubleshooting common XP problems and annoyances, like a too-rapid cursor blink rate. Nutshell is a reference for advanced users of home and professional editions, with an alphabetical format that allows quick lookup of functions and features within larger sections (e.g., networking, the registry, etc.). Each is useful and appropriate for larger libraries.'
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

"...the information is spot on." Windows XP, October 2002 --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 624 pages
  • Publisher: Pogue Press; Second Edition edition (December 23, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 059600897X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0596008970
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 7.1 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (34 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #95,531 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

David Pogue is the personal-technology columnist for the New York Times. Each week, he contributes a print column, an online column and an online video. His daily blog, "Pogue's Posts," is the Times's most popular blog. David is also an Emmy award-winning tech correspondent for CBS News and a frequent guest on NPR's "Morning Edition." His trademark comic tech videos appear each Thursday morning on CNBC. With over 3 million books in print, David is one of the world's bestselling how-to authors. He launched his own series of complete, funny computer books called the Missing Manual series, which now includes 60 titles. David graduated summa cum laude from Yale in 1985, with distinction in Music, and he spent ten years conducting and arranging Broadway musicals in New York. He's been profiled on both "48 Hours" and "60 Minutes."

 

Customer Reviews

34 Reviews
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 (27)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (34 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

172 of 175 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Save yourself, and buy this book., December 3, 2002
By 
In reviewing David Pogue's latest iteration of The Missing Manual series for Windows XP Home Edition you have to keep in mind it's the Home Edition, in other words it's for the vast majority of us plodders who don't know squat about the amazing depth of functionality of Microsoft's new operating system. It is a marvelous book that I rate as a definite "Just Shut Up and Buy It". Your personal computer experience will take a change for the better.

My personal digital experience didn't ask the question, "Where do you want to go today?" but rather, "just how deep do I really want to get in to this mess today?" David Pogue's book will answer the second question so you can ask the first one with a straight face. Then you can proudly button up your properly configured and operating computer, and go get a life.

If we gave a quiz to a random sample of 1000 XP Home Edition users, how many would know off the top of their heads, for example, how to add ® for a trademark or © for a copyright? Or, that they may or may not be received properly in an e-mail such as the one I'm writing right now? I'm guessing less than 5% of us, and that's probably generous. Most of us just eke out a meager existence of typing e-mails and printing photos without knowing that Ctrl+Enter will surround a web address with `http:www.' and a `.com'. And where exactly was I supposed to learn that, without The Missing Manual? These may sound trivial, but when you multiply them by the dozens of great tips The Missing Manual provides, life in Windows XP becomes a far richer and less frustrating experience.

But The Missing Manual isn't just a compendium of slick tips; it's a step-by-step, function-by-function guide for all of us that are too proud to admit in public that we don't really know how to make the best of XP. This book will even teach you how to be the system administrator of your home network, if your family's computer usage has driven you to this precipice. You'll even look like you know what you're doing, because you will. My experience is that The Missing Manual will become a well-thumbed volume, sitting next to your new friend: Your computer. Just shut up and buy it.

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128 of 130 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good for the new to intermediate user, September 14, 2002
By 
x_bruce (Oak Park, ILLINOIS United States) - See all my reviews
David Pogue writes in a clear, relaxed style with the kind of humor that makes reading a Windows XP book enjoyable. There are many screenshots and well written instructions on what to do and why you are doing it.

Windows XP Home Edition: The Missing Manual is a hands on book but can be read when you're not in front of your computer. Topics cover the standard things like setup, how to get around the new interface, included applets and networking.

If you've used a computer before and chances are good you have if you're reading this review then you'll be comfortable with the technical level and explainations in the book. Intermediate users will enjoy being able to look up areas of interest and actually there are some great tips on how to work with Windows XP Home Edition. Advanced users will want more and this is not the complete comprehensive text. That said it is one of the best.

XP was a big change from earlier consumer versions of Windows and users will pick up quite a bit of useful tips and tricks as a bonus.

What it comes down to is how you enjoy learning. If you like text heavy books this may dissapoint. If you enjoy step by step books you will get that and considerably more. This is a good balance between both styles and is an easy read. Read the example, it will give a good idea of the style of Windows XP Home Edition: The Missing Manual.

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78 of 78 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars David Pogue does Windows, January 31, 2005
By 
This review is from: Windows XP Home Edition: The Missing Manual (2nd Edition) (Paperback)

It is probably fair to say that author David Pogue "does Windows" as well as anyone. Not in designing the operating system, of course, but in explaining how to use it. Pogue has written "Windows XP Home Edition: The Missing Manual, 2nd Ed.", which is an update of the original 2002 Edition. Although he is long associated with writing about the Apple Macintosh operating system and applications, here he demonstrates his knowledge of the Windows XP system as well. The book covers the latest version of XP Home, including the Service Pack 2 update.

Pogue is currently a computer columnist for the NY Times and the author of 35 books, most notably many in the "Missing Manual" series published by Pogue Press/O'Reilly Media, Inc. With that series, Pogue has created a "template " for explaining operating systems and applications for non-technical users of all levels which almost cannot be improved upon. He describes and explains technical material in a straight-forward manner in clear, concise language. Nearly every page of the Manuals include either an illustration, chart, or sidebar helping to facilitate both reading and learning. More significantly, he mixes humor, practical experience insights and guidance, and some mild critique of the software to create manuals which don't really read as mere manuals. No one likes to read manuals after all, but Pogue makes such reading as pleasant as it can be, as well as being functional, of course.

This book starts by introducing some developmental history of the Windows operating system and provides some basics of the system. It describes the newest features of XP, and realistically notes the "Dark Side" of the current Microsoft offering - its security weaknesses, its privacy issues, its continual use of proprietary data and other formats, and its less than subtle marketing features. Pogue is not writing a critical work here, but fairly comments on matters which confront the user of XP, both to help explain a feature and why it works in a certain way, and to let the reader know that what seems like an oddity in design or function is not due to the user's failures.

There are five parts comprised of 18 chapters of substantive material covering pretty much everything a non-technical user needs to know about using and maintaining the XP operating system, as well as how to use the many applications which come with it. The book provides material on backing up files, maintaining the operating system, and troublesho oting. There are whole sections just on configuring the various Control Panels to customize one's machine, and a menu-by-menu description of XP Home.

There is even material for higher level users and for those who want to know more about the higher-level technical stuff. There are "power user" tips sprinkled throughout the book and Appendix C, for example, discusses the Windows Registry where novices are discouraged. Pogue describes the Registry, how to edit it, and even provides some (safe) examples.

There is plenty of material here for virtually everyone, including those who just want or need to know about specific matters, like how to handle digital photos and sound files, how to configure and use the chat and video conferencing applications, or in adding hardware, like printers, scanners, and external drives.

Perhaps the best aspect of it all is that all this good writing and printing production costs only $24.95. A bargain.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
active desktop, custom install, working outline, password reset disk, funny quotes, bluetooth devices, browser extension, new toolbar, more info, simple folder view, final wizard screen, user profile folder, shortcut menu, filmstrip view, dialing rules, notification area
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Outlook Express, Control Panel, Internet Explorer, Recycle Bin, All Programs, Service Pack, Windows Messenger, Media Player, Local Disk, Movie Maker, System Restore, Windows Explorer, Disk Defragmenter, File Edit View Favorites Tools Help, Remote Assistance, Microsoft Word, Fast User Switching, Device Manager, Shared Documents, Network Connections, Indexing Service, Quick Launch, Microsoft Office, User Accounts, Cancel Figure
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