Description:
Anyone who's ever administered an operating system knows what happens when you take an operating system that was built over the course of many years for consumer use and supplement it with features for working with multimedia files and communicating across networks. Instability, or at best user confusion, is the prompt result. Windows Me Annoyances documents precisely such an operating system--Microsoft Windows Me--and shows how the system administrator or power user (or any user who's not afraid to get dirty hands, really) can best cope with its foibles. Presumably, it's just a coincidence that this book features a bloated, misshapen frog on its cover. David Karp evidently set out not to write a how-to book--there are already zillions of those around--but rather a book of Windows wisdom. In explaining how to solve driver-related problems, Karp not only shows how to load a device driver into Windows, but also how to tell whether your machine is using the one that shipped on the Windows Me CD-ROM or a newer one from the manufacturer--and why you'd want to opt to install a driver through Windows rather than through an installer program. This coverage is typical of Karp's work, which would be better only if it had more information about cable modems, digital subscriber line (DSL) links, and satellite Internet connectivity. --David Wall Topics covered: Solving problems in Microsoft Windows Me via the easiest and most effective methods possible. Techniques for solving hardware conflicts, adding features, and working around poorly designed aspects of the operating system.
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