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Windows
XP Book Reviews
Can't curl up with the SuperSite at night? Try some of
these books!
In this first installment of Windows XP book reviews, I
look at some of the first XP titles from Microsoft
Press. I hope to have more soon, and if you're
interested in seeing any particular titles reviewed,
please contact
me.
Note that I've written my own XP book,
Great Digital Media with Windows XP, as well. |
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Windows XP Step-by Step
Limited Edition
by Online Training Solutions
Microsoft Press, 2001
$19.99
Target Audience: Beginners
Extras: Full color limited edition, CD-ROM
Microsoft's Step by
Step titles are designed for beginning home users,
and feature hand holding chapters that work through
specific, entry-level skills. This volume, now available
in an attractive, limited edition, color version, is no
different, offering up sections on XP basics, security,
files and folders, hardware and software, making
connections, and the like. The book can be read straight
through, which I recommend for true beginners, or you
can dig in anywhere and get right to the information
you're most interested in.
Kudos to the authors for
including security information so early in the book, as
this is one of the biggest changes new XP users will
face when upgrading. It is critical that Windows users
begin thinking about security now that we live in an
unsafe online world.
An accompanying CD-ROM
includes practice files that are used with the
step-by-step exercises that fill each chapter.
--Paul Thurrott
November 27, 2001
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Windows XP Plain & Simple
by Jerry Joyce and Marianne Moon
Microsoft Press, 2001
$19.99
Target Audience: Beginners
Extras: Printed in full color
Written for true novices,
Windows XP Plain & Simple assumes almost nothing
of the reader beyond being able to use a mouse and find
particular keys on the keyboard. It's also written
expressly for Home Edition, and correctly figures that
its audience is probably not sophisticated enough to
customize anything in the system on their own. As such,
it's a great introduction to XP for beginners.
Plain & Simple
is even designed around the way a PC neophyte would
explore the new system: It starts off with real basics,
like accessing documents, minimizing windows, and
composing documents, then moves logically through
chapters on running programs and playing games,
exploring the Internet, sending email, working with
pictures and movies, and so on. It doesn't offer a
complete guide to any of these tasks, of course, but
then it's not really designed to be a comprehensive
reference.
My only real complaint
is that security is given short thrift. Unlike Step
by Step above, Plain & Simple doesn't tackle
this important XP issue until late in the book.
--Paul Thurrott
November 27, 2001
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Step by Step
Home Networking with Microsoft Windows XP
by Matthew Danda and Heather T.
Brown
Microsoft Press, 2001
$19.99
Target Audience: Beginners
A relatively sparse title that covers only the basics of
home networking, Step by Step Home Networking with
Microsoft Windows XP covers networking types, XP's
new Network Setup Wizard, and other related topics.
Coming in at only 150 pages, this title should cost
considerably less than its $24.99 asking price, but if
you're just interested in getting connected to the
Internet, sharing that connection, and perhaps sharing
printers and files between two or more computers,
Step by Step Home Networking will get you started.
One
thing that is covered adequately, however, is connecting
XP to non-XP machines, such as Windows 98 boxes and
Macs. Given the networking differences between XP and
its predecessors, understanding the gotchas and
workarounds to this kind of set up is crucial for many
people.
Note that intermediate
and advanced users should look elsewhere.
--Paul Thurrott
November 27, 2001
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Windows XP Professional Administrator's Pocket
Consultant
by William R. Stanek
Microsoft Press, 2001
$19.99
Target Audience: IT Professionals
Extras: Small form factor offers maximum portability
Aimed at IT professionals who will be administering XP
Pro in mixed Windows environments, the
Administrator's Pocket Consultant is a handy,
small-format guide for getting answers quickly. It's not
a hand-holding XP walkthrough but rather a series of
reference chapters that focus on specific facets of this
new OS, including configuration and optimization, core
administration tasks, networking, and recovery. For
anyone stuck and in need of immediate answers, this book
could be a lifesaver.
One
small caveat: The author notes that this title is meant
to be used in conjunction with the upcoming Windows
.NET Server Administrator's Pocket Consultant,
which will cover such topics as directory services
administration and the like. However, most
administrators today will be better served with the
Windows 2000 Server version of this title, which is
available today. Just note that the XP book here focuses
solely on user and desktop administration issues and
doesn't deal with the server at all. Granted, this is a
wide open topic anyway, with plenty to cover.
I
recommend this title to all Windows administrators who
are adding XP to their networks.
--Paul Thurrott
November 27, 2001
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Windows XP
Professional Resource Kit Documentation
by Microsoft Corporation
Microsoft Press, 2001
$19.99
Target Audience: IT Professionals
Extras: CD with electronic version of book
What can I say about the
XP Resource Kit? If you need it, you know you need it.
Like previous RKs, the Windows XP Resource Kit is a
comprehensive tome of information, weighing in at over
1600 pages. And while it's still a must-have for any
Windows-based IT professional, the XP RK is lacking one
crucial thing: A set of software tools like those that
accompanied previous releases. Instead, this book
includes documentation only, and the accompanying CD
simply contains a searchable electronic version of the
text. I asked Microsoft about this and was told that the
RK tools, like the missing Administrator's Tools Pack,
were being created by the Windows .NET Server team and
would therefore ship with that product, not XP. Curious.
Regardless, the XP
Resource Kit Documentation is in a league of its
own. Highly recommended.
--Paul Thurrott
November 27, 2001
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