The Whole Internet for Windows 95

The Whole Internet for Windows 95

by Ed Krol (Author), Paula Ferguson (Author)

Synopsis

The Whole Internet for Windows 95 is a comprehensive introduction to the Internet. For Windows users who in the past have struggled to take full advantage of the Internet's powerful utilities, Windows 95's built-in Internet support is a cause for celebration. When users get online with Windows 95, this book will guide them every step of the way. The book shows you how to use the Internet tools that are part of Windows 95 and MicrosoftPLUS!. It also contains free software programs that are downloadable from the Net.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 644
Edition: 1
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Published: 11 Nov 1995

ISBN 10: 1565921550
ISBN 13: 9781565921559

Author Bio
Paula Ferguson is a writer for O'Reilly & Associates, as well as the editor of The X Resource series. She has worked on a number of Internet projects, including The Mosaic Handbook. She has also updated various volumes in the X series, including Volume 6A, Motif Reference Manual. Before joining O'Reilly, Paula developed and taught courses on the Motif toolkit for the Open Software Foundation and worked on a variety of other interface design and software development projects. Paula graduated from M.I.T. in 1990 with a B.S. in computer science and engineering. She currently lives in Boulder, Colorado, with her black lab puppy, Obo, and her two cats. When she's not telecommuting from her home office, she's outside rock climbing, cycling, skiing, or mountaineering. Raised in the Chicago area, Ed Krol went to the University of Illinois, got a degree in computer science, and never left. In 1985 Krol became part of a networking group at the University of Illinois where he became the network manager at the time the National Center for Supercomputer Applications was formed. It was there that he managed the installation of the original NSFnet. During the same period, he also wrote the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Internet because he had so much trouble getting information and was sick of telling the same story to everyone. In 1989 Krol opted to leave the fast lane and returned to pastoral life on campus, where he remains to this day assistant director for Network Information Services, Computing and Communications Service Office, University of Illinois, Urbana. He also writes a monthly column for Network World. He has a wife and daughter (who is in the Hacker's Dictionary as the toddler responsible for Mollyguards ). In his spare time Krol is a pilot and plays hockey.