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Author - Curt Simmons ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Paperback Book item from Wiley was reviewed on 25-Oct-2008. Search ISBN:0764548522 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Windows XP Secrets Reference Book. Classifications : Operating Systems Computer Science New & Used Textbooks Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books Programming Languages Computer Science New & Used Textbooks Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General AA . Click the following link to view the cover of Windows XP Secrets. Related topics: Operating Systems. Computer Science. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. Computer Science. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. General AAS. requestid: 301d5378-2475-477b-9d46-8e93dea74469requestprocessingtime: 0.1838990000000000 salesrank: 531684 edition: 1st numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 160880230740 1) Paperback Book Windows XP Secrets by Wiley. Just standard mumbo jumbo. Extremely elementary. The only secret is that it has none.¤ 2) Paperback Book Windows XP Secrets by Wiley. Just standard mumbo jumbo. Extremely elementary. The only secret is that it has none.¤ 3) Paperback Book Windows XP Secrets by Wiley. I haven´t been using Secrets books (or a computer for that matter) since Windows 3.x, so I don´t have a frame of reference for this new Secrets book like some of the other reviewers. All I can say is if you are a moderately good computer user and want to find out a bunch of cool and (sometimes) weird things about XP, this book is great. It covers system items well and points out configuration things you might not notice on your own.¤ 4) Paperback Book Windows XP Secrets by Wiley. This book provides a lot info on Windows XP - more out of the way kinds of things than you might find in other books. I used the Windows Me Secrets book, and frankly, though it was fully of a lot of junk. This book is very focused and I´ve found everything in it useful. Lots of good info on 3rd utilites. I do wish it had a CD, but I think it was worth the asking price¤ 5) Paperback Book Windows XP Secrets by Wiley. The Secret is out: This is not a very good book.. I was very disappointed with Windows XP Secrets. I had previously bought Windows 95, 98, and Me Secrets along with several of their Office Secrets and was very satisfied. The first thing I noticed was the length on the book. In "Me Secrets" the author writes: "...Windows Me is a minor upgrade-not a major departure from Windows 98...." Yet the Me book takes up almost 1,500 pages. Windows XP is the greatest change in the system since Windows 95 yet But the book has only about 700 pages, half the size of Me. Some things have to be left out. And they were. This includes the CD ROM that came with other Secret´s books. The Windows secrets Book usually contained: Personalization Tips and Secrets: There are more "tips" than secrets. No fun, no sense of reality in the writing. Finally, the previous editions of Secrets came with a CD. For example, entire book, with a searchable database, was able to be loaded on your computer. This was great. You were able to get help instantly. No such book here.¤ 6) Paperback Book Windows XP Secrets by Wiley. Do what you never thought possible with Windows XP! Harness the power of the latest version of Windows with hundreds of undocumented features and shortcuts to optimize performance and productivity. 7) Paperback Book Windows XP Secrets by Wiley. Windows XP Secrets does a fine job of documenting the latest Microsoft operating system, largely because its author assumes that you already know a fair bit about Windows from experience. He seems to figure that you´re interested in the features that are new in Windows XP, and also in getting it to look and behave the way you want. As a result, this book combines documentation of the new features with some pretty cool hints--a lot of which you likely would not have found on your own, or bothered to hunt for on the Internet--about the appearance and function of Windows XP. You may gripe a bit about the amount of straight documentation Curt Simmons has included--he explains such pedestrian matters as adding a modem and creating a Windows Media Player playlist--but the obscure hints appear in sufficient number to earn the book its selling price. Particularly cool is Simmons´s affinity for third-party software--especially Tweaki and TweakUI--and the depth of coverage he´s given the Registry. He´s also earned kudos for paying attention to the command line, which remains the best way to do a lot of work, even in super-graphical Windows XP. This book would be better if it included a table that referred the reader directly to the scattered "SECRET" boxes--which contain a lot of the best factoids. But even without such an index this volume is a good guide to Windows XP for power users. --David Wall Topics covered: How to install and use Windows XP, with emphasis on interface customization using less obvious configuration settings. Application compatibility, the applets in the Microsoft Management Console (MMC), Registry settings, Internet security, and small-office networking are some of the more interesting areas the author covers.¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 22-Nov-2008, 0764548522785555094376, 050-000-780-750-220-950-540-9EB-8
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