Mastering Windows XP Professional |
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| Title: | Mastering Windows XP Professional |
| Author: | Mark Minasi |
| Publisher: | Sybex Inc |
| Type: | Book / Paperback |
| Publication Date: | October, 2001 |
| ISBN / ISBN-13: | 0782129811 / 9780782129816 |
| List Price: | $39.99 |
| You Save: | $9.60 |
| Amazon Price: | $30.39 |
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This book is also available, brand-new, from 3rd-party marketplace sellers at Amazon.com, from $4.98.
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Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:
Product Description --Mark Minasi, the world's #1 Windows authority, brings to Microsoft's new generation of Windows operating systems his technical expertise and ability to make topics easy to understand. --This in-depth guide covers features new to Windows XP Professional, including the revamped desktop, Backup and Recovery Tools, Device Driver Rollback, CD Burning, digital media features, Network Bridging, Personal Firewall, Remote Desktop Connection and the Migration Wizard. --Great for beginners or advanced users, this is an indispensable resource for NT administrators, MCSE candidates, and business and home office users.
Amazon.com Review The risk Mark Minasi takes in Mastering Windows XP Professional is in attempting to cover a shockingly broad swathe of knowledge. He begins with instructions for manipulating (maximizing, minimizing, and closing) windows and concludes with making static entries in the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) cache for speedier routing. That's like writing a manual for an automobile that begins with opening the passenger-side door, goes all the way through driving and routine maintenance, and concludes with instructions for tweaking the fuel-injection system for a tiny horsepower gain. Does he pull it off? By and large, yes, if you adopt the philosophy that this book isn't sacred writ and is meant only to clarify details as you develop understanding of Windows XP for yourself. Stuck on how to "print to a file," and why you'd want to do that? There's a succinct passage on that subject. Considering broadband Internet options? Minasi summarizes the pros and cons of each nicely. Large subjects that require knowledge of subjects outside of Windows--like scripting for the Windows Script Host (WSH), which is a kind of programming--are a hard fit for encyclopedic books like this one. They deserve (and have) books of their own, and the distilled entry in this omnibus is bound to seem either too elementary to be useful or too obscure to be understood. The problem with this book is that it's better suited to novice and moderately experienced computer users who should be using Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition, not the more feature-rich Professional version. Users of Windows XP Professional probably won't need to be told how to shut their machines off but may well want detailed coverage of how to configure Internet Information Services (IIS), a subject to which Minasi gives only two pages. Though it's not for power users or administrators of Windows XP Professional, this book is a good choice for users of Windows XP Home Edition, as well as novices who have had Professional forced upon them by a corporate computing department. --David Wall Topics covered: Nearly all everyday aspects of Windows XP Professional (like Internet connectivity, formatting and printing, and local-area network hookups) and many more advanced subjects (like firewalling, Registry editing, scripting, and security configuration). New features like fax services, system rollback, and the handy photo viewer are dealt with nicely.
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Customer Reviews:
If You Have Xp Pro Get This Book!
27 February, 2007
If I didn't have this book, I would be in a lot of trouble with having Windows XP Pro. This book is easy to understand and it is written by one of the masters, Mark Minasi. It has been very useful for me.
- Amazon Customer Review
Mark Minasi: Mastering Windows Xp
19 September, 2009
Mark Minasi always delivers. I loved his book Mastering Windows 2000 and this one is just as good if not better.
- Amazon Customer Review
I Wouldn't Call It A Reference For All Levels
21 November, 2006
Work gave us copies of this book when we first started to convert to XP. I never read it myself until recently when I decided to see about expanding my ever shrinking book shelf space.
Minasi gave a good effort to cover as much as possible. Some of the info is slightly dated as windows 2003 was not around and it still talks about 10base2 and 10base5 albeit in a historical sense.
If you are seasoned professional, I would not suggest this book as a reference. Especially, if you run a windows network. There is not that much in it that would really help in advanced situations.
This is a beginners book with a little to move it towards middle level skills. You get the basics of the OS and there are decent explanation for concepts that a beginner might not understand. For example, there is very basic information for html, dhtml, and vbscript.
If you are experienced, you might wonder why this book is taking of shelf space.
I think for vista, I might check out the inside/out book instead.
- Amazon Customer Review
Readable And Detailed
16 April, 2004
Mark Minasi is a great writer, with the ability to take a complex subject, like Windows XP, and make it fairly readable. This book is typical of the "Mastering" series, however, and is not intended for light weights. If you are a home or private user, you may be better served with something akin to the "Windows for Dummies" variety. I'm not trying to be condescending, just realistic. This book is highly detailed and goes well beyond the average users needs. However, the first 89 pages of this book present a color plated introduction to using XP, which I found very helpful and better than most related products on the market. The first 89 pages alone are worth the price of this book for most of us. As an administrator, this book will also serve you well with its detailed explanations, extensive graphics and screen shots, and Mark's interpretation of Microsoft's technical manuals.Compare this book to Microsoft's publication of "Windows XP" (ISBN: 0735618054).
- Amazon Customer Review
Buy This Book
03 May, 2005
Someone here said they liked Windows Xp Complete a lot, so I looked at that, and bought it, too. I have several computer books I consider "Golden". Well written, complete, easy to read and understand, and, most importantly, written by someone who is clearly a "sage" in the field. This is one of those books. I laugh when a reviewer expects EVERYTHING out of one book - that's why I got "WinXP Complete" too. This one goes deep into the guts of Windows where it counts. If you need complete knowlege of aspects - Networking, for example, then, of course you need a Networking book. Mr. Minasi is quite thorough where it counts, though - running Windows Pro with assurance and authority.
- Amazon Customer Review
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