Entries Tagged 'The Book' ↓

Windows Vista Inside Out Deluxe Edition is now available

Ed noticed this morning that our latest book, Windows Vista Inside Out Deluxe Edition, is now in stock and available for delivery from Amazon.com. So, you might ask, what’s the difference between this book and the original edition of Windows Vista Inside Out?

Beyond the obvious — 1440 pages vs. 1132 pages; $60 SRP vs. $50 (currently $37.79 vs. $31.49 at Amazon) — just about everything.

The Deluxe Edition has five additional chapters and three additional appendixes, which include coverage of the following topics:

  • Using nontraditional input methods, including Tablet PC and speech recognition
  • Synchronizing files using Sync Center, Robocopy, and Offline Files
  • Accessing your computer from remote locations using Remote Desktop Connection or a VPN connection
  • Encrypting sensitive files using Encrypting File System or BitLocker Drive Encryption
  • Using Group Policy, including how to configure and use Multiple Local Group Policy Objects, a feature (new in Windows Vista) that lets you apply different GP settings to different users, even on computers that are not part of an Active Directory domain
  • Changes included in Service Pack 1 (this appendix is based on the “notable changes in SP1″ document available from Microsoft, but we’ve organized the list in logical groups by function and feature — so you can easily find the fixes that are likely to affect you)

This latest edition, of course, includes complete coverage of SP1, including the handful of visible changes and the scores of under-the-hood differences. Perhaps most important, Deluxe Edition, most of which was written in the first part of 2008, includes the knowledge, wisdom, and hard knocks acquired while using Windows Vista in the first year following its release. I daresay there isn’t a page in the book that hasn’t changed in some way since the original edition — an updated screen shot, a newly discovered tip, a correction to an earlier error.

We also recaptured many of the screens with an eye toward making the relevant part larger. Screen captures in Vista are problematical because it uses muted colors and lots of empty space within dialog boxes and windows; this combination translates poorly to black-and-white, especially when it’s reduced to fit on a printed page. I’m pleased to say that Microsoft Press does a better job than anyone in presenting such screens, and we worked with them to make the screen images even better in this Deluxe Edition.

I haven’t yet seen a printed copy myself — but based on the proofs we reviewed, we’re happy with it. We hope you will be too!

Looking for a Top Ten list?

As a gift to folks who are missing their daily fix of Letterman’s Top Ten list due to the WGA strike, let me suggest:

Amazon.com Best Books of 2007, Top 10 Editors’ Picks: Computers & Internet

And check it out. Look who’s at number 7. Woo-hoo!

Corrections, anyone?

Getting this book out was a game of hurry up and wait. After the RTM code was made available in early November, we took a full month to finish the manuscript, did the back-and-forth with our crack production team to get pages laid out and proofread and off to the printers before New Year’s Eve, and had the finished product on bookstore shelves right around the time Windows Vista was released for retail sale on January 30. And then we all took a deep breath and started looking at all the things we had to postpone or neglect while we concentrated on this project.

Anyway, I just returned to this site for the first time in months and discovered that a dozen comments had been incorrectly held for moderation. I’ve approved them all and have changed the site so that comments will be posted instantly and we’ll get faster notice when a comment gets held up in the future.

We’ve also begun looking in the newsgroups for posts containing questions or feedback we can incorporate into the Deluxe Edition, which is due for release in early 2008. If you have questions or comments, post them right here. We’ll get to them as quickly as we can.

Meanwhile, you can click the Errata link in the header of this page to see a list of errors we’ve identified so far.

Still waiting…

Our so-called hot copies haven’t arrived from Microsoft Press yet, and the trucks are apparently still circling around Amazon’s warehouse waiting for a loading dock to open.

Our author copies have arrived, and Amazon is now shipping preordered copies. The first shipment to Amazon sold out immediately, so if you place an order via Amazon now you’ll have to wait until they get their next order in. 

Some brick-and-mortar shops have books in stock, or so we’re told.

If you’ve got your copy, post a comment here and tell us where you got it!

Counting down to January 17

That’s when Microsoft Press says that Windows Vista Inside Out will be ready.