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Paperback Sams Teach Yourself Microsoft Windows Vista All in One Book

ISBN: 0672328895

ISBN13: 9780672328893

Sams Teach Yourself Microsoft Windows Vista All in One

(Part of the Sams Teach Yourself Series Series and Sams Teach Yourself Series: All in One Series)

Step-by-step instructions cover the commonest questions, issues and tasks relating to Microsoft Windows Vista. Each lesson builds upon a real-world foundation allowing users to learn the essentials... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Very Helpful for levels of Office Users, well written

The book is the best for learning the changes in Office, I bought it to help me learn about the new functions with Excel but after reading the book you will gain a new appreciation of Office 2007. Great Book!!!!

New Office 2007

For those who have installed the MS Office 2007 but are accustomed to Office 2003 and wonder what happened, this is the book. It's clearly written and eazy to understand.

Bloated

I was thinking of giving this just three stars, but after using Vista for a month, the book does seem to be complete and fairly accurate, so I didn't want to ding it too badly. Now for the bad part. For one, the book is way too big at 750 pages. As someone with a good knowledge of XP and a few days poking around in Vista before I started the book, the "hey, I didn't know that" moments were few and far between. But even for a book aimed at novices this one is too bloated. Just one example, though there are plenty more - most of p. 492 describes six categories of non-system programs. The categories seem to be of the authors making and there's no indication that they are of any practical value, and certainly not when using Vista. The other issue, minor and understandable but annoying nonetheless is the relentless promoting of Vista. Discussing Media Player, a third of the way through the book, the author says "at the risk of letting this turn into something that sounds like a Microsoft-paid commercial". In my mind it had reached that point on page 1 with the sentence, "Windows Vista is cool." It continued on page after page. I realize this book wasn't intended to be either an exposé or a dry college textbook, and that badmouthing Vista would hardly help the authors book sales, but a little detachment would be nice. The author's contention (highly suspect to begin with) that the book is designed for users from beginner to advanced doesn't hold up. For a novice user, this is probably a good book. The advanced user should be prepared to wade through 735 pages of dross for their 15 pages of gold.

Amazing

This book is excellent, refreshed plenty of tricks and made tasks very easy to go through.
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