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As someone who in the past has struggled even with one of the Dummies guides I found this book very straightforward as it cuts its way through the jungle of faxing, blocking or routing messages, security settings and conferencing with Net Meeting. Not to mention how to set up a distribution list or a Newsgroup account.
The section on Administrative Tools Demystified is very useful. As the authors point out, data has an inherent tendency to fragment and no user, no matter how expert, can avoid this problem. The advice on checking for disk errors and defragmenting files is lucid and to the point. With this guide every XP user should be able to optimize their system for peak performance.
The book has a pretty neutral tone (unlike the sometimes irritatingly folksy tone of the Dummies series), though a dry wit sometimes surfaces. The section on what the authors' call XP's plumbing aims to supply "all the information you need to appear very knowledgeable the next time that bad-tempered tech-support guy barks his questions at you".
A final section is devoted specifically to business projects. Topics include setting up a small network, working with a client/server network and last but not least troubleshooting system problems and errors (including guidelines for setting up a diaster recovery plan). A useful glossary defines terms like "Ethernet address" and explains enigmatic acronyms (IAB, IANA, ICANN, ICS, IETF etc).
For business users this is definitely the authoritative guide to XP Professional but XP Home users should find it useful too since it also covers features like Media Player and Movie Maker, printing photos, protection from viruses, working with floppy disks, and all those other things which the home PC user is likely to use.
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And one more note - the author tends to be biased towards SCO Unix (now part of Caldera) and will, from time to time, incorporate SCO-only commands.
Everyone with a MS-DOS background who is starting out into Linux , as I am, should start with this book.
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The book draws upon some famous British figures - Reginald Heber, Bishop of Calcutta and a minor poet; Eliza Fay, a contemporary of Warren Hastings; and Richard Burton, the travellor, author, and so forth. There are diaries and memoirs kept by military men, by administrators, by their wives, and by clergymen. There is considerably more material available post-1818, than for the period before then.
This review will confine itself to a general description. The book is not divided into time periods (as far as I could tell) but by the diarists and memoirists and the time they spent in India. Thus Fay comes early in the book, Heber in the middle, and Burton towards the end. Dyson does try to break up each section by analyzing not just the authors' impressions of India (the sights, the festivals, the people) but also their attitudes towards Indians and the growing Eurasian community. Some of this comes across more clearly than others, because of the nature of the material available.
The semi-chronological nature of the book allows the casual reader to understand how British views of India changed across time. However, this same method of analysis means that the views of different memoirists across time cannot be contrasted on a particular subject. For example, how did Eliza Fay's attitudes towards the status of native (Indian) women compare to the attitudes of male memoirists in the same period, or in a different period? That is not really addressed in this book, although Dyson does provide biographical sketches of the principal memoirists selected with some reference to their background, their education, and their expectations of India. [The attitudes of young society ladies visiting a relative in India was very different from the attitudes of a missionary's wife].
One problem I had with this book was a failure to provide an appendix listing all the major diarists and memoirists whose materials were used, together with biographical sketches. Given that Dyson provided two other appendices (of extracts from memoirs, letters and diaries), I might be asking too much. But this would have helped understand why some diarists were chosen and others omitted, and which diarists or memoirists made an impact on the reader back in England via publication.
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University of Cadiz. I first read it in February 1993 and still refer to it now and again.
It covers earlier European voyages to the Americas, Vikings but NOT St Brendan's Irish voyage to Greenland etc, circa 570 AD.
Nor to speak does it cover the undiscoverd maps or puertolanos passed down from generation to generation of the Basque Cod fishing grounds located between Iceland and North America.
It also covers Colon's earlier voyages along the coast Africa and northern Europe and the very interesting clues that existed of another continent in the west atlantique. Interestingly it
does mention a mysterious map or puertolano in the initial voyage.
However it is Eurocentric and neglects to mention the great Arab explorers nor the voyages of Asian (Chineese, Polyanesian and ? Australian aborigines- whose remains were found in-Cien Fuegos-Chile & Brazil 3 years ago) to the North American continent.
Other interesting tales of discovery are 'the Adventures of Ibn Battuta' by ross Dunn ISBN: 0520067436
and the voyages of discovery of 'Pytheas the Greek' by Barry Cunliffe ISBN: 0713995092
Naoise@nkoh.demon.co.uk