What computer books should we have on our bookshelves?
The thread title says it all really. What are the really worthwhile computer books to have (and what are the ones to avoid)?
To start things off, for computer hardware Scott Mueller's "Upgrading and Repairing PC's" is my well thumbed bible:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...books&n=507846
And for Windows XP I like Bott & Siechert's "Windows XP Inside Out" best of all:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...369647-5260852
Books, magazines, references, whatever
I like PC World myself. PC Mag, although I subscribe to it (they practically gave it to me free when I subscribed to the PC Mag Utility Library), is pretty boring. Not a lot about computing, more lately on just stuff. A whole bunch of stuff, much of which I'm not really interested in (next thing you know, my refrigerator is gonna be dialing the Internet or something. Enough is enough!). We mostly have what we want -- 3 computers, an MP3 player, a digital camera, a scanner, a camcorder, home theater -- I draw the line. It only makes me curse the pall of rampant consumerism over our society.
By contrast, I really do feel PC World is useful not just for more information about computing versus just gadgets, but also for its consumer stance. At a time when I too was just beginning it seemed as if it took a very pro-consumer line and gave you information you really needed. Like a geek's Consumer Reports.
Cheers
Wendy
:cool: ;) :D