View Review Details


Book:   The Internet: The Missing Manual
Subject:   The idea of what the internet is capable of bringing to you!
Date:   2007-01-04 00:00:57
From:   Tanya Boudreau
Rating:  StarStarStarStarStar

You can turn to your computer and the internet for everything. Reach for your mouse and keyboard to find up-to-the-minute news. Download or buy what you want in music, movies, or television. Try your hand at writing; create your own blog (an online diary), add photographs, and post your blog online for family and friends to read. Save time and money and do your banking, shopping, and travel planning online. Meet new people worldwide, through gaming websites or on dating sites. Stay in touch regularly through email, chatting, and internet phone calls.


This book will give you an idea of what the internet is capable of bringing to you, and what is on the internet today. The book guides you through, starting with the various ways to get online. For example, a broadband connection is the faster, but more expensive way to get online. Dial-up is the slower, but least expensive way to go. Pros and cons are listed whenever choices and options are presented. Windows and Macintosh computer systems are referred to throughout the book too. There are numerous tips, notes, diagrams and pictures inside the book. The pictures provide readers with visual examples of previous discussions. The tips and notes are helpful in making the internet experience easier to understand and maneuver. For example, one tip refers to free antivirus programs for Windows, and another tip involves erasing cookies from your computer. Some tips list fun and interesting websites. A great movie trailers page is listed in one tip. As stated in the introduction of the book, “the primary discussions are written for advanced-beginner or intermediate computer users”. In addition, the authors have provided grey boxes labeled “/Up To/ /Speed/”, which are helpful for the new learner, and boxes labeled “/Power Users’ Clinic/”, which will be of interest to the advanced users. The boxes “/Word To The Wise/”, “/Gem In The Rough/”, “/Workaround Workshop/” supply insightful information for everyone as well. The information in this book will help you learn to surf the web effectively, how to set up your browser, how to search engines and directories, and how to find many great websites. (The medical websites, and fact/reference websites presented are fantastic.) If the sites are not free, or a subscription is required, this is noted as well.


This is a handy book to have by your computer. And a good book to have if you need clarification about the internet. Explanations are straightforward, and easy to follow and understand, especially when diagrams and pictures are shown. The authors have taken the confusion and fear out of the internet. The knowledge contained in this book will give you confidence to use the internet to its fullest potential- and in a safe and smart way! Some other Missing Manual titles include: Flash 8: The Missing Manual, Google: The Missing Manual (2nd edition), Creating Websites: The Missing Manual, and eBay: The Missing Manual. The author J.D. Biersdorfer, who writes a weekly column in the Circuits section of the New York Times, is the author of iPods & iTunes: The Missing Manual. David Pogue, who writes a technology column for the New York Times, is the creator of the Missing Manual series.



See larger cover


"This is the first non-technical (meaning it will appeal to non-Geeks!), largely platform agnostic manual on the Internet that I have come across, and frankly, I find it at least as - if not more so - interesting to read as a depiction of our current society than as a technical work."
--George Carrington, ACT Apple User Group Inc., Austrailia