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PCs for Dummies

PCs for Dummies

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Author: Dan Gookin
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Category: Book

List Price: £14.99
Buy New: £4.57
You Save: £10.42 (70%)



Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 36192

Media: Paperback
Edition: 11th Edition
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 408
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.4 x 1.1

ISBN: 0470137282
Dewey Decimal Number: 004.165
EAN: 9780470137284
ASIN: 0470137282

Publication Date: September 14, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Unknown Binding - PCs For Dummies
  • Paperback - PCs for Dummies
  • Paperback - PCs for Dummies
  • Paperback - PCs for Dummies
  • Paperback - PCs for Dummies (For Dummies (Computers))
  • Unknown Binding - Pcs for Dummies
  • Paperback - PC'S for Dummies, 7th Edition Bundle (For Dummies (Computers))
  • Paperback - PCs for Dummies, 10th Edition
  • Hardcover - PCs for Dummies (Thorndike Health, Home & Learning)
  • Paperback - PCs for Dummies
  • Paperback - PCs for Dummies
  • Paperback - PCs for Dummies
  • Paperback - PC's for Dummies (For Dummies S.)
  • Paperback - PCs for Dummies
  • Unknown Binding - Pcs for Dummies

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  • Troubleshooting Your PC for Dummies

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Explaining the fundamentals of personal computing to those who would rather read words than look at pictures, PCs for Dummies tells you everything you need to know in order to use an IBM-compatible PC running Windows 98. Dan Gookin's prose is technically astute and fun to read.

This isn't the book for you if you're looking through a computer catalogue and wondering what all the jargon means (Buying a Computer for Dummies covers that). Rather, this book will help you when you've got the machine into your home and you need to know what to do next. Starting with the process of unpacking the box and plugging in all the cables, this book shows you what to do with your new machine.

After assembly is out of the way, Gookin shows you how to get around in Windows 98 (and Windows 95, which is almost identical). He explains concepts like files, directories, and applications, and frequently explains the exact procedures involved in common tasks like adjusting screen resolution. Once you've heard all about the basics, Gookin goes on to explain modem configuration, printer problems, productivity software, and a fair amount about Internet use. --David Wall, Amazon.com


Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars PCs for Dummies   September 22, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

First computer book that I bought and still comes in useful after 5years. Dan Gookin takes some beating as an author.


1 out of 5 stars Don't even think about buying this book   July 8, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

My wife bought this book some years ago when we got our first PC as we're both pretty computer-illiterate (or were then). I can honestly say that over the years I have consulted this book on numerous occasions when things have gone wrong, and not once has it been any help. In fact, I would go further, it has never failed to complicate a problem rather than simplify it. Consult the index? What you are looking for is never there. Seek a simple explanation to a basic problem? You'll be given a facetious and unintelligible answer (if you can find any answer at all). Worst of all, it is done in the unfunniest, most relentlessly jokey, matey tone that I have ever encountered. Don't waste your money.


4 out of 5 stars What's a Start Menu...............!?   December 27, 2007
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

The first thing you notice bout this book - is that it is funny. But after a while it starts to get a bit annoying as the book seems more like it's `trying' to be funny than actually being funny.

Anyway - I am pretty good with PCs (messed around with them for years) and decided to flick through this book that my mum-in-law has recently acquired.

It does a good job of separating the technobabble from the technology and gives good steady walkthroughs of what it deems to be the essentials. I'm sure though that everyone has their own idea of what is `the essentials' and so the book may never satisfy everyone.

The good thing about the non-reliance on techno-speak is that the book doesn't date too badly. I've seen an old edition of this book (2001 edition) and it is still pretty relevant today. It gives an example of a fast PC with 256MB of RAM which is laughable these days - but the book is still handy.

It isn't just the software side of things either that this book tackles - it deals with adjusting your monitor settings, what the various ports on your PC are for, what various components do. I'm not a massive Windows user myself, but the author explains at the beginning of the book that this covers only PCs running Windows based operating systems.

In a nutshell - This is a brilliant book for a PC novice. It doesn't make the reader feel daunted, and it should help inspire confidence. It is funny (even if it does grate after a while!), and even if you can only get your hands on a copy of an old edition - much of the information will still be relevant (unless you are using the ultimate PC slower-upper: Vista! In which case you'll probably need a more recent version as the others may only cover up to XP).



2 out of 5 stars Maybe for dummies, but probably not for beginners   January 7, 2003
 20 out of 23 found this review helpful

I bought this book for my mother who, with no prior experience of any kind, recently bought a computer.

The concept of 'windows', 'files', 'folders' and 'programs' were entirely alien to her and this book didn't help much in providing the answers. She found much of the content repetitious, and the loud humour off-putting. This book wasn't the answer to her absolute beginner needs.

So could nothing help? Was it my mother or was it the book?

Well she's since gone on to buy two other books, supposedly for beginners, and these have helped her progress to the stage where she is now teaching my father how to use the PC.

In short, there are better solutions out there.


5 out of 5 stars The Best Introduction to Computers You Could Have   July 21, 2002
 16 out of 16 found this review helpful

If you're a complete beginner or, like me, you have a just a small amount of knowledge and experience of computers then I don't see that you could find a better guide book than this one. I would strongly recommend it especially to people who have got a computer for the first time and find the whole business of what you can and can't do on it bewildering. The author has a degree in communications and it shows. Every aspect of using a computer is dealt with in turn and explained in a very effective way that gets the meaning across without being technical.

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