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Dan Gookin : DOS for Dummies (V02)
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Author: Dan Gookin
Title: DOS for Dummies (V02)
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 382
Date: 1993-03-19
ISBN: 1878058754
Publisher: IDG Books Worldwide, Inc.
Latest: 2016/02/11
Weight: 1.8 pounds
Size: 0.9 x 9.9 x 9.9 inches
Edition: 2
Amazon prices:
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$3.95Amazon
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Description: Product Description
Last year's runaway bestseller is now revised and updated for the latest version of DOS. It's bigger and dumber than ever! Everybody's favorite computer book author takes an intimidating and boring subject like DOS and shows you that it's okay to laugh as you learn. With over 500,000 in print, the original edition has sold and sold and sold--over nine months atop the bestseller lists in the U.S., U.K., Canada, and Australia.


Amazon.com Review
The book that changed the way computer books are written and marketed has come out in a third edition. By and large, it's the same as the previous edition (advances in MS-DOS have not been numerous), but there is some new information here. Further, DOS for Dummies remains an entertaining book and if you use DOS, it's the book you want to assist you.

The basic idea of this book is that you can identify a problem you're having with your computer, ranging from how to turn the thing on to how to back up only the files that have changed since the last backup. You can then turn to the relevant section--the table of contents is very detailed--read a few pages, carry out some procedure, and move on to the next problem. You'll find sections on hardware, file management, text editing, and software installation. Later chapters deal with troubleshooting.

The newest material in this release of DOS for Dummies deals with DOS 6.22 and the DOS-like shell that you can use under Windows 95 and Windows 98. For users of the latest versions of Windows, Gookin demonstrates some relevant procedures. But most of the coverage deals with DOS itself and programs that are designed to run under DOS. There's even stuff about WordStar here (it's a little-known fact of history that the Rosetta stone was written with WordStar).

DOS for Dummies is funny, too, in a wry sort of way. What kind of joke is appropriate to a section about parallel ports, anyway? The author manages to infuse practically every passage with humor. Other computer books should make an effort to take themselves less seriously. The verdict: if you're using DOS--and more of you are than the Windows people would have us believe--this book will provide you with valuable help. --David Wall

Reviews: Cheryl Glenn (USA: MT) (2011/04/21):
Most people believe that DOS is an old, outdated operating system, not worth learning. However, there are several powerful computer forensic tools that require a familiarity with DOS commands, and the ability to work from the command prompt. The knowledge is the building block that underlies the more sophisticated software tools.

This book like most of the "for dummies" books, it written in easily understandable language. Some computer books assume that you have a high level of technical knowledge, that is all implied. For a beginner, this is like opening a book in a foreign language and trying to read it without any lessons in vocabulary and structure of the language. This book is written for real people, who view computers as tools, not as their purpose in life.



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